8.0658 × 10⁶⁷
Just slightly less than the amount of jewish faggotry in congress.
8.0658 × 10⁶⁷
Just slightly less than the amount of jewish faggotry in congress.
False. Yes it's improbable to get the exact same shuffle, but it could happen being as a fresh pack of cards is always the same order. One shuffle would be significantly higher odds. 3 shuffles, a cut, and a shuffle... Well I'm no mathemagician.
Still, it would be a pretty good magic trick to go over the odds and shuffle two decks to the same order.
it could happen being as a fresh pack of cards is always the same order
Yes this is the common caveat. The logic assumes the deck has already been shuffled.
But, but, but I was told that bacteria randomly rearranged its dna to become a monkey. The permutation of that event is statistically impossible. Therefore, I will disregard the math and pretend it doesn't exist in order to maintain my opinion on evolution.
very good
80,658,175,170,943,878,571,660,636,856,403,766,975,289,505,440,883,277,824,000,000,000,000 is the combinations from a starting value of 52. The starting value of bacteria is approximately 5,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. Each slightly mutate through their fast lived generations. Mutations may, or may not be useful as seen in subsequent generations.
So you're telling me there's a chance?
Quick - buy a lottery ticket.
Selective breeding is a type of short term controlled evolution that we have done with all sorts of both plants and animals. It isn't a stretch to realize that over the course of millions of years, due to environmental reasons or random mutation, you can wind up with vastly different varieties of life forms.
Strange how sleight of hand artists can shuffle a deck and then you pick a card that they want you to pick.
How’s that work with your 6 grizillion combos?
because he is manipulating the cards, Titus is doing a non manipulated random shuffle.
If a human touches it’s manipulated. If a machine touches it, it can be manipulated.
Then best cryptos were tube based that the variance in electrical current made it even more random.
I would say the laws of randomness say this isn't true. There have been billions of decks of cards shuffled over hundreds of years. There is just no way possible that no two decks have ever ended up in the same order.
However, Grok has explained to me in great detail that I am wrong. Its actually quite mind blowing.
TIL, eh?
I didn't believe it at first either.