If a die rolled the same 1000 times in a row, than practically it is far more likely that the die is rigged. But the way that probability theory is discussed wouldn't account for such a thing that isn't specifically mentioned in the problem presented. A real life situation has many more variables than a hypothetical one.
totalrefan t1_ja9cnke wrote
Reply to comment by johrnjohrn in ELI5: why does/doesn’t probability increase when done multiple times? by Reason-Local
If a die rolled the same 1000 times in a row, than practically it is far more likely that the die is rigged. But the way that probability theory is discussed wouldn't account for such a thing that isn't specifically mentioned in the problem presented. A real life situation has many more variables than a hypothetical one.