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I am having a hard time grasping the concept of random actually being a concept that applys to the world at the more complex level. I believe that if you had every particles location and velocity, you could evidently predict the future, for they will all follow a pattern. I do know however that one of the laws of Quantium Mechanics prevents you from measuring both a particles location and velocity simoultainously. Truely, where does randomness apply to the real world?

2007-02-26 18:19:32 · 2 answers · asked by ☢☠☣☢☠☣ 3 in Science & Mathematics Physics

First off, let me restate the question: What scientific theories and/or laws oppose the idea of a predictable future?


Also, Beebop, not only would I know what you are made of and how you look by knowing the positions and velocities of the particles, but also the brain patterns that are going on, which has lead me to believe everything is predictable for they all follow a pattern.

2007-02-27 11:19:37 · update #1

2 answers

like if i ran up and kicked you in the nuts. do you know who i am what i look like could you predict that i was gonna do it until my foot raised to your groin, probaly not random is easy

2007-02-26 18:22:55 · answer #1 · answered by beebop 2 · 0 0

having no specific pattern or purpose.cause or order

2007-02-27 02:28:11 · answer #2 · answered by fatdadslim 6 · 0 0

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