Sark wrote:And100 wrote:Sark wrote:
Nope. The lotto takes place in a literal vacuum. The outcome is not affected by anything in the outside world. There is no butterfly effect which changes the outcome of the balls.
Of course it does. Members of the participating teams attend the lottery. You're assuming no matter what happened in regard to the final standings, every person would have walked into that room in the exact identical manner to the microsecond and gesture. It's a lotto machine like you see on TV. Each ball placed different into the machine by even of a fraction of the second or inch changes the results. The guy running the machine looks in a different direction and things are different.
That's a simple fact. Of course that means the Knicks could have also finished first, instead of second, but it would have been different if just Steve Mills arrived 30 seconds before or after he did. There were human hands loading the balls and operating the machine being influenced by people in the room with them.
If a lotto can be affected by outside sources, then it is not legit. The whole point of putting it in that vacuum machine, is to show that it is in a vacuum, and not affected by anything in the outside world. Otherwise, why not just do a roll of the dice? Or something that is literally inside of a vacuum?
Of course its affected by outside sources, it's just can't be specifically influenced. Balls are dropped into the machine and they scramble around like the lotto balls you see on TV, bouncing off one another. No lotto ball is a perfect sphere, so HOW they are placed in the machine by a human hand influences the entire result. The exact speed of the fan changes the results. The humidity in the room influences how they bounce. You think the machine is computer controlled by an atomic clock? You can load the machine twice in identical fashion "in a vacuum" and if you turn off the machine even a split second different in the "B" run" than you did in the "A" run, the results change.
Per NBA.com. "The drawing process occurs in the following manner: All 14 balls are placed in the lottery machine and they are mixed for 20 seconds"
20.01 seconds vs. 20.02 gives you a different result.
The process is utterly RANDOM, which serves its purpose. It doesn't occur in some pocket vacuum universe.
TOTAL butterfly effect. Any human person involved in the process has a different conversation in a reality in which the Knicks finished with the worst record and the lotto results change. Again, maybe in the Knicks favor. I'm not arguing they wouldn't have gotten the 2 seed. I'm saying the obvious, they wouldn't
necessarily have gotten the 2 seed, they might have got the 1.