Question:

Can you Predict furture with 100% Certainity?

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Theorotically if Someone or Computer get to know everything Going around in Environment like , wind speed , volcanos , Water , Rays, Damage to living thing all knowledge and having memory to store and analyze at once , i m just saying Theorotically .

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  1. trying to let [Schrödinger's] cat out of the box, i see...

    you would only be computing the possible futures and not THE future. since as time passes previous futures become new pasts that may change the dynamics of your equation...

    besides, everyone gets pissed at the weatherman for messing up a forecast, consider how pissed people would be if you mucked up future forecasts.


  2. The long answer:

    The computer would have to be a lot larger

    than the system it was making predictions about,

    (elementary information theory), and even then,

    random fluctuations at the quantum level would

    introduce a level of uncertainty.

    The short answer;... NO.

  3. d**n f**k it...

    Yes. It is possible... as I'm experencing tonight... well living through the moments I've seen already...

    You had to use Bouncyness in your answer didnt you innoc3nt! I remember this Q and you stating that... Thats too much of a coinsidence to be fake...

    I'm a 'training' precog (for lack of a better word) and the only reason it's not 100% is I have a c**p memory... and I've been too parra to keep notes on the future... lol...

    And we still don't no how the brain stores memories or how it works... it maybe that a biological computer (the brain) is more capable of dealing with the external than you think.

  4. no, that's exactly why God creates each one of us with a weakness. combine together we are still weak to the point where we are 99.9999% close this understand something but doesn't because we were not made to be superman, but trying to solve everything and understand everything is what we were made for. , theorotically speaking,, the chances are no technological instrument or man may predict such a thing with the stated accuracy.

  5. I  would say, yes, for a peiod of time not exceding 8.5 minutes. This is the length of time it would take for evidence of the sun being destroyed to reach us.

  6. this is highly debated..but i dont think that u can predict future. 'future' is an unreal thing. it is unreal because future depends on wat happens in the present. just think about when u had to make choices in the past and think about how the future could have been different if u made different choices.

  7. No; only God knows the future.

  8. Yes, absolutely! I have often thought about this myself. What we call random is really only our uncertainty. The roll of a pair of dice, for example. It is all very predictable, if you know the variables such as the initial position of the dice and hand, wind current, surface friction, bounciness (for lack of a better word) of the dice, etc. If one could know all the laws that govern the universe, and have the capacity to store and analyze all the data in a given moment, one could essentially calculate the future or derive the past. Because every event is related, no matter how distant. Everything has a cause and effect. A butterfly flapping its wings in Peru could trigger an earthquake in Japan.

    This is all theoretically speaking, of course. I do believe that the future is determined, that all events are correlated, and that nothing is truly random, not even the decay of a radioactive atom--merely uncertain to us humans at this point. But the reality is that it is just not possible for anyone to know or personally predict the future. To store all the data in the universe would require a storage space with more bits than the universe itself, just as a computer requires multiple bits to record a single character of data. I suppose it goes without saying that I don't believe in an omniscient god.

    But perhaps there could be separate universes goverened by different laws. It might then be possible to store all the data to describe a single universe. There is so much that we will never know; we are so insignificant, and I am humbled by nature.

  9. Answer in short is impossible even theorotically...

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