Ask ChatGPT to pick a number between 1 and 100

ElCanut@jlai.lu to Technology@beehaw.org – 430 points –
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What's special about 37? Just that it's prime or is there a superstition or pop culture reference I don't know?

If you discount the pop-culture numbers (for us 7, 42, and 69) its the number most often chosen by people if you ask them for a random number between 1 and 100. It just seems the most random one to choose for a lot of people. Veritasium just did a video about it.

37 is my favorite, because 3x7x37=777 (three sevens), and I think that's neat.

Wrong. Two hints:

7x7=9 at the end, not 7.

30x30=900, already more than 777.

One hint: 3x7=21, 21x37=777.

When in doubt, use a calculator.

? My calculator definitely thinks that 3x7x37=777. Did you read it as 37x37 instead?

You don’t even need a calculator for a quick calculation, take the closest value of 10: 3x7=21x37 or easier 20x40 = 800 which is close to the actual number, 777.

What about 57

Heinz Ketchup?

I think you mean heinz 57 the steak sauce....

not this again.

it's ketchup mfer, 57 varieties of tomatoes!

Unsolicited fact: Heinz picked the number 57 at random, it just sounded like good marketing at a time when things were general marketed as "tonic #4" and the like.

(well, maybe not fact, more like probable truth)

Another fun fact: if you ask people to pick 2/3rds of a number everyone else picks when asked the same question, the correct number is drumroll 24.

I don't like the inclusion of 37%, it's 1/e that isn't even 37%, is only that because of a pretty arbitrary rounding. Veritasium videos are usually OK, but this one is pretty meh.

Sorry but pop culture from were? I don’t recognize any of those numbers.

Lucky number 7.

42 is the meaning of life in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.

And 69...nice!

I'm guessing this is for US and UK culture? Probably a lot of other former and current English colonies

It's not the meaning of life. It's the Ultimate Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. Nobody knows what the Question is.

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Probably just because it's prime. It's just that humans are terrible at understanding the concept of randomness. A study by Theodore P. Hill showed that when tasked to pick a random number between 1 and 10, almost a third of the subjects (n was over 8500) picked 7. 10 was the least picked number (if you ditch the few idiots that picked 0).

Maybe randomness is a label we slapped on shit we don't understand.

I remember watching a lecture about probability, and the professor said that only quantum processes are really random, the rest of things that we call random is just the human inability to measure the variables that affects the random outcome. I'm an actuarie, and it's made me change the perspective on how I see and study random processes and how it made think on ways to influence the outcome of random processes.

...which is kind of a hilarious tautology, because "quantum processes" are by definition "processes that we are unable to decompose into more basic parts".

The moment we learn about some more fundamental processes being the reason for a given process, it stops being "quantum" and the new ones become "it".

Even quantum just appears random I think. it's beyond our scope of perspective, it works in multiple dimensions. we only see part of the process. That's my guess though it could be totally wrong

it's a matter of interpretation, but generally the consensus is that quantum measurements are truly probabilistic (random), Bell proved that there can't be any hidden variables that influence the outcome

Didn't Bell just put that up as a theory and it got proven somewhat recently by other researchers? The 2022 physics Nobel Prize was about disproving hidden variables and they titled their finding with the catchy phrase "the universe is not locally real".

He proved it mathematically, but it was only recently confirmed experimentally

I see, thanks for the insight!

No problem! Interpretations of quantum mechanics are also still very much under discussion, and Bell's inequality only says that there are no local hidden variables. While QM very accurately describes observations so far, it's by no means solved, and there's a good chance that a new theory will upend much of it in the future

Interpretation for sure. Bells theory and then it being proven winning a Nobel prize to me only proves more we really don't understand the world around us and only perceive what we need to survive. And that maybe we should be less standoffish to ideas that change our current paradigm, because we obviously have a lot to learn.

Bells inequality is a statement about math, it gives an inequality that could only be violated if there were no local hidden variables (read: if measurements were truly random). That was a statement of math, which is rigorously provable. It took experimental confirmation, but we can now say with high confidence that there are no local hidden variables (i.e. there is no information hidden that we simply cannot measure, instead the outcome is only decided the moment you measure).

Global hidden variables are still an option, but they would require much of the rest of physics to be rewritten

I didn't know either, but it seems to be an often picked 'random' number by people. Here is an article about it, I didn't read it though.

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