he_who_is_nobody said:Again, your citation was irrelevant to what we are discussing. Beyond that, whether you realize it or not, that is your burden and you keep running from it. What were the odds when you picked 7312004874512? If you would answer this simple question, instead of running from it, you would already see the flaw in your thinking.
I am not running away, I openly and unambiguously have admitted multiple times that I don’t know the odds, because I don’t how to quantify all the variables that affected my choice.
There are methods that would provide an “almost exact” answer, but I don’t have the budget, nor the time, or the interest to do it, all we know (and has been proven) is that the probability of selecting 7 is grater than the possibility of selecting 7312004874512
Again our only point of disagreement is whether if we humans can make a completely random selection of a real number, I already provided a source that proves that we can´t. what else you I do? Should I provide additional sources?
Given that human selection is not completly random, not all numbers have the exact same probability of being chosen, then the probability of picking 7 are not necessarily zero and not necesairly the same as picking 7312004874512.
In fact according to this source https://www.rd.com/culture/number-7/ the probability of picking “7” is around 10%