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Craig
I am a therapist who has a lot of interest in the macro application of quantum mechanics, which I believe will be the next step to a theory of everything especially quantum gravity.
What's the probability of 4 out of 6 guessing coin flip correctly 4 times of 10, 3 times incorrect, 3 even?
I am testing the concept that quantum probabilities on the microscopic scale can effect real world outcomes on the macroscopic scale as in coin tosses for which the consensus among a group of people correctly guess, as per an observer effect, the likelihood of landing either heads or tails side up more than 51% of the time, thus guessing incorrectly less than 49% of the time. In other words, I have recorded instances when the group consensus regarding the results of 10 coin tosses guessed more accurately than what would be expected by chance alone with 4 occurrences correct, 3 occurrences incorrect and 3 times split, whereupon group members guessed heads and tails equally. The only problem is that I cannot figure out how to calculate such odds. This would be simple if it were just one person guessing at the results of 10 coin tosses but my experiment predicts that their is greater quantum probability for a group consensus.
1 AnswerMathematics8 years ago