The ball should land in green 5.26% of the time, red 47.37% of the time, and black 47.37% of the time.
A following of one thing after another in time.
You don't tell what 'the following' is, so we cannot answer.
We need an awnser
They give you specific individual's point of view of events from his or her era.
Held political events that did not involve voting
To calculate the probabilities of compound events, you can use the multiplication rule or the addition rule, depending on whether the events are independent or mutually exclusive. The multiplication rule is used when the events are independent, and you multiply the probabilities of the individual events. The addition rule is used when the events are mutually exclusive, and you add the probabilities of the individual events.
They are not!
Things and numbers don't have probabilities. Situations and events that can happen have probabilities.
Yes
The answer depends on if and how the events depend on one another.
If the events are independent then you can multiply the individual probabilities. But if they are not, you have to use conditional probabilities.
Two events are said to be independent if the outcome of one event does not affect the outcome of the other. Their probabilities are independent probabilities. If the events are not independent then they are dependent.
False
Yes. no its not its false :from Scott Powell
They are both measures of the likelihood of specified events.
No, it is not.
Conditional probabilities arise when you revise the probabilities previously attached to some events in order to take new information into account. The revised probabilities are 'conditional on the new information you have received'.