Can't get more clear than that, I fear.
Your "read into where I was tending with the request" was more like it. Sorry if I was unclear. I was more interested in what phenomenon such a machine would have at its disposal -- anything we can currently know/detect (sensors on the thumb, muscle contraction detection of some sort, etc.), only a prior history of coin flips, or all-phenomenon-that-can-ever-be-known-even-if-we-don't-currently-know-how-to-know-it? By "accurate"
I was more meaning, "accurate given what input information?" Then again, perhaps your addition of "sufficiently" should have clued me in on the fact that you meant a machine that could know absolutely everything.
I'll probably have to table this one as I really don't know enough about all of this to discuss further, but I do appreciate the food for thought. Very interesting stuff. I'm intuitively drawn to say that there is nothing actually random... but I am certainly not locked into that position, nor (again) do I know what I'm talking about were I to try and defend that with substantial evidence/argument.
Then again, perhaps your addition of "sufficiently" should have clued me in on the fact that you meant a machine that could know absolutely everything.
Funny thing. Just a few hours ago today, I was having a conversation with someone who said, "I need to remember, {Logos01}, that you use words in their literal meaning."
I'm intuitively drawn to say that there is nothing actually random...
It's a common intuition. I have the opposite intuition. As a layman, however, I don't know enough to get our postulates in line with one another. So I'll leave you to explore the topic yourself.
I'm about 2/3 through an apologetics book that was recommended to me, Menssen and Sullivan's, The Agnostic Inquirer, and was quite surprised to run into a discussion of Bayes theorem and wanted some input from the LW community. The book is quite philosophical and I admit that I am probably not following all of it. I find heady philosophy to be one of these areas where something doesn't seem quite right (as in the conclusion that someone pushes), but I can't always identify what.
In any case, the primary point of the book is to attempt to replace the traditional apologetics method with a new one. The status quo has been to appeal to "natural theology," non-theological areas of discussion which attempt to bring one to the conclusion that some kind of theistic being exists, and from there establish that Christianity is the true formulation of what, exactly, this theistic being is/wants/does, etc by examining revealed theistic truths (aka the Bible). Menssen and Sullivan attempt to suggest that revelation need not be put off so long.
I don't want to get too into it, but think this helps set the stage. Their argument is as follows:
Issues Menssen and Sullivan have with Bayes applicability to this arena:
Then they begin trying to choose the best method for evaluating revelatory content. This is where Bayes comes in. The pages are almost all available via Google books HERE in Section 4.2.1, beginning on page 173. They suggest the following limitations: