Magical Realist
Valued Senior Member
I can't be held responsible for your inaccuracies.
Yes it is.
Prediction applies to a system. You have assumed the system to be "look at the previous digits and try to establish the next state (i.e. predict the Nth digit)".
Other systems exist in which Pi is predictable. And it is so predictable that we can actually establish it with 100% accuracy.
We merely need to use algorithms.
I repeat, if you are referring to the system of using the previous digits to try to establish the next, then yes, as stated up front, it is unpredictable.
But that does not make Pi unpredictable... only that system (of trying to guess digits from the preceeding ones, which will be the system referred to in any quote you try to post).
Pi is a number. It exists as a number independent of any calculation. It is not a system in and of itself. It can not therefore, in and of itself, be "unpredictable".
There exist numerous systems of trying to predict the next digit: one of which is using previous numbers. And in this regard, the next digit is unpredictable.
But there exist systems of establishing the next digit that do not rely on the previous numbers, and they can have 100% predictive ability, which is why we can use them to actually calculate those digits.
But heck, you'll just refer to this as semantic tapdancing.
Uh no..calculating pi in any sense, either by calculating the previous numbers or using an algorithm, is not predicting it. It's determining it. Predicting would be finding the pattern and inferring the digits from there. As in knowing in advance of calculating it out. And as I show there is no such known pattern. The sequence of digits is totally random and unpredictable.