A philosopher of science writes suppose we toss a fair coin


A philosopher of science writes, "Suppose we toss a fair coin 10,000 times, the first 5000 tosses being done under a red light, and the last 5000 under a green light. The color of the light does not affect the coin. However, we would expect the statistical null hypothesis-that exactly as many heads will be thrown under the red light as the green light-would very likely not be true. There will nearly always be random fluctuations that make the statistical null hypothesis false." Has the null hypothesis been set up correctly? Explain briefly.

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Microeconomics: A philosopher of science writes suppose we toss a fair coin
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