Hey there! My question is: is randomness an illusion or can everything theoretically be predicted? Let me use the coin toss analogy. At first, a coin toss appears totally random, but as we look deeper, we find that the "randomness" is simply a result of factors that we cannot perveive at first glance (ie. tossing force, distance from ground, air resistance etc). Suddenly the coin toss isn't random anymore. So is true randomness really out there or is all randomness just an illusion?
That's an excellent question. Here is a rough reply. Oftentimes, when we refer to some everyday phenomenon as "random", we mean that we are ignorant of the fundamental causes at work -- as in games of chance. However, according to modern physics, there are some fundamental phenomena involving the behavior of sub-atomic particles that are genuinely random. For example, if a radioactive atom existing now has a half-life of (let's say) 100 seconds, then there is a 50% chance that it will decay sometime during the next 100 seconds, and there is no feature that the atom has now (or that anything else has now) that determines whether the atom will decay or won't decay. It is an irreducibly random process. In other words, the atoms that ultimately do decay before 100 seconds have passed are no different now from the atoms that do not decay during that interval. There are no "hidden variables" to distinguish them. I should add that the reason we have for believing that these phenomena are genuinely random...
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