Ian Pitchford

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By pulling back a bit like this, we quickly see that although the probability of any one coincidence is indeed quite low, the probability of the union of all such coincidental events can be quite high. Our sense of astonishment when confronted by coincidence can thus be traced to our intuitive tendency to assess the likelihood of the intersection of the specific events that did occur, rather than the union of all similar outcomes that might have occurred.
How We Know What Isn't So (A Psychological Study on Logic)
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