| > Sure, but given a large enough sample both will likely exist. This applies to every event with nonzero probabilities. What's your point? > Humans have been finding patterns in clouds, stars and even toast since time immemorial. I knew this—humans love finding patterns. But our discussion is not about that. It's about the very basic thing in probabilities, which is some event is not as likely to happen as others. This is so trivially true. The probability of getting a proper English word from a random string generator is much less likely than the probability of not getting it. Thus, getting a proper English word should be surprising. It is as surprising as getting any string from a set of gibberish strings with the same cardinality of English vocabularies. > So the fact that one happens to be english should not surprise anyone What should surprise you, then? I'm surprised that we need to talk about this very basic thing three times. |
Except that's not a given.
Any equally long random string is as likely as any other equally long random string.
Different length sets of random strings may differ in probability.
Finding what might appear to be meaningful structures in large data sets, e.g. shapes in 2T galaxies, doesn't inherently suggest anymore than chance.