Iruka said:
I think, Dumsum, that it is probably even worse than that: your chance of choosing an algebraic number (not just a rational number) is zero, since the algebraic numbers are also denumerable, and the chance of choosing a transcendental number is one.
It is odd, I will agree, but the probability of picking any specific number is zero, however, some number will be picked. I think it probably demonstrates a lack of clarity concerning the concept of infinity, rather than problems with the idea of randomness.
First of all, I have to point out that theres a difference between impossibility and probability 0
impossibility implies probability 0, but not necessarily the converse
flipping a coin and getting heads forever is conceivably possible, but has limiting probability 0
something similar applies for a continous random variable- each value has probability 0, but some value WILL be chosen, hence each value is still "possible", just has infinitesmal probabiltiy
and the original question doesnt really make sense, unless you can integrate the probability density function for the random variable.
and it even gets even more stranger than probabiltiy of choosing a algebraic number being 0,
the probability of choosing a COMPUTABLE number is actually 0 (since number of computable numbers = number of integers)
so how would we actually "choose" such a random number from the reals? naturally, we would get a computer to pick such a number, yet by definition, any number the computer generates is computable. so even if we could choose such a number, chances are, it would be impossible to know what it actually its (even approximately)
and finally, personally, i find it hard to swallow the philosophical concept of randomness. how can anything be inherently random?
after all, nearly all fields of human intellectual endearvour is about linking cause and effect, to understand the relationship between the 2 and making predictions. if we assume that there are some situations where cause and effect are totally decoupled, then isnt the whole world totally fucked up?
if you think hard about it, it seems that pretty much all of the time, we adopt the critical axiom that cause and effect are totally connected, that the same cause must, will and can have one and only one effect. that if we repeated experiements in exactly the same place, time and situation, it would wind up the same way. how is it possible that the exact same inputs, then processed the exact same way under the same circumstances can produce different outputs? to me, to deny this axiom is totally unfathomable. there would be no point learning then, when the same question would have different answers and theres no way to know when which one is right.
to me, randomness is a mystery that i dont thinmk i'l ever understand