Quote Originally Posted by OngBonga View Post
Did you not like the answer "probability"?
As I explained, probability describes the rate of a process happening, not the outcome.

To determine the rate of a nuclear reaction or interaction, you first calculate the probability of the outcome happening per chance to happen, then multiply by the chances to happen.
Each observable outcome is a deterministic state, and the sum of probabilities of all observable outcomes is always 1.

Probability describes whether or not a thing happened, it doesn't alter the outcomes of the thing happening.

Quote Originally Posted by OngBonga View Post
I have another potential solution... initial conditions of matter vs antimatter were an odd number. If one particle of matter survives, along with all the energy that's left over, then we still have an interaction. There is a universe. Perhaps the universe as we know it "grew" from one solitary matter particle.
That explains the existence of 1 piece of matter in the universe, not the 10^big other particles out there with no anti-particle partner to annihilate with.