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What Is Random? Chance and Order in Mathematics and Life by Edward Beltrami.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York: Springer Science + Business, 1999.Description: xx, 201pISBN:
  • 9780387987378 (Hb)
  • 9781461271567 (print)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 519.2 B419W 23
LOC classification:
  • QA273.A1-274.9
  • QA274-274.9
Online resources:
Contents:
[1] The Taming of Chance -- From Unpredictable to Lawful -- Probability -- Order in the Large -- The Normal Law -- Is It Random? -- More About the Law of Large Numbers -- Where We Stand Now -- [2] Uncertainty and Information -- Messages and Information -- Entropy -- Messages, Codes, and Entropy -- Approximate Entropy -- Again, Is It Random? -- The Perception of Randomness -- [3] Janus-Faced Randomness -- Is Determinism an Illusion? -- Generating Randomness -- Janus and the Demons -- [4] Algorithms, Information, and Chance -- Algorithmic Randomness -- Algorithmic Complexity and Undecidability -- Algorithmic Probability -- [5] The Edge of Randomness -- Between Order and Disorder -- Self-Similarity and Complexity -- What Good is Randomness? -- Sources and Further Readings -- Technical Notes -- Appendix A: Geometric Sums -- Appendix B: Binary Numbers -- Appendix C: Logarithims -- References.
In: Springer eBooksSpringerLink ebooks - Mathematics and Statistics (Archive)Summary: (Not for distribution) We all know what randomness is. We sometimes choose between options "at random", and if we toss a coin we know it will land heads or tails at random. But are events like these truly random? Randomness turns out to be one of those concepts, like "solid matter" in physics, that works just fine on an everyday level but mysteriously disappears once we move in to examine its fine structure. In this fascinating book, mathematician Ed Beltrami takes a close enough look at randomness to make it mysteriously disappear. The results of coin tosses, it turns out, are determined from the start, and only our incomplete knowledge makes them look random. "Random" sequences of numbers are more elusive--they may be truly random, but Godel's undecidability theorem informs us that we'll never know. Their apparent randomness may be only a shortcoming of our minds. Mathematicians have even discovered a string of numbers that appears random--but when you reverse the string, it's completely deterministic! People familiar with quantum indeterminacy tell us that order is an illusion, and that the world is fundamentally random. Yet randomness is also an illusion. Then which is real? Perhaps order and randomness, like waves and particles, are only two sides of the same coin.
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Books Books Central Library, IISER Bhopal General Section 519.2 B419W (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 7125

[1] The Taming of Chance -- From Unpredictable to Lawful -- Probability -- Order in the Large -- The Normal Law -- Is It Random? -- More About the Law of Large Numbers -- Where We Stand Now -- [2] Uncertainty and Information -- Messages and Information -- Entropy -- Messages, Codes, and Entropy -- Approximate Entropy -- Again, Is It Random? -- The Perception of Randomness -- [3] Janus-Faced Randomness -- Is Determinism an Illusion? -- Generating Randomness -- Janus and the Demons -- [4] Algorithms, Information, and Chance -- Algorithmic Randomness -- Algorithmic Complexity and Undecidability -- Algorithmic Probability -- [5] The Edge of Randomness -- Between Order and Disorder -- Self-Similarity and Complexity -- What Good is Randomness? -- Sources and Further Readings -- Technical Notes -- Appendix A: Geometric Sums -- Appendix B: Binary Numbers -- Appendix C: Logarithims -- References.

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(Not for distribution) We all know what randomness is. We sometimes choose between options "at random", and if we toss a coin we know it will land heads or tails at random. But are events like these truly random? Randomness turns out to be one of those concepts, like "solid matter" in physics, that works just fine on an everyday level but mysteriously disappears once we move in to examine its fine structure. In this fascinating book, mathematician Ed Beltrami takes a close enough look at randomness to make it mysteriously disappear. The results of coin tosses, it turns out, are determined from the start, and only our incomplete knowledge makes them look random. "Random" sequences of numbers are more elusive--they may be truly random, but Godel's undecidability theorem informs us that we'll never know. Their apparent randomness may be only a shortcoming of our minds. Mathematicians have even discovered a string of numbers that appears random--but when you reverse the string, it's completely deterministic! People familiar with quantum indeterminacy tell us that order is an illusion, and that the world is fundamentally random. Yet randomness is also an illusion. Then which is real? Perhaps order and randomness, like waves and particles, are only two sides of the same coin.

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