[web]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability[/web]
Probability
It's all right there on Wikipedia.
Falling down stairs is an
event. Breaking a leg in a fall down the stairs is a
conditional event. You can't use the chances of breaking a leg for ANY reason in this calculation because breaking a leg is conditional on falling down stairs in this example.
Conditional Probability
You could make the subject simple by asking
"What are the chances of rolling a dice and getting six twice in a row?" The conditional event is the first throw of six. Obviously, the chances of throwing two sixes in a row are lower than throwing just one six.
In the case of the WTC collapse, it seems pretty clear to me that NIST's Final Report declared that ordinary office fires were the sole cause of the collapse. So, if you wanted to analyze the chances of a high-rise office building collapsing due to fire (and you accepted NIST's conclusions), you would have to accept the usual probability of serious fires occurring in any given high-rise in the first place -- because the
conditional event is
serious fires (NOT terrorist strikes occurring nearby; NOT other buildings collapsing next door).
[The true origin of the fires in WTC7 remains a mystery. Were they deliberately set or were they started by the collapse of the Towers. We don't know.]
I find it pretty humorous that NIST characterizes the collapse of Building 7 as "extremely rare" -- given that, allegedly, it is the ONLY building in history ever to have suffered total collapse due to fire. Similarly, there had never been a Total Progressive Collapse of a high-rise structure for ANY reason prior to 911. All the building collapses on 911 were "extremely rare".
I'm sure you could call a building insurer and discover what the statistical chances are of a high-rise suffering a serious fire. But how would you determine the statistical probability of a unique event like a total collapse caused by fire? How would you determine the statistical probability of a Total Progressive Collapse of a steel-framed high-rise for ANY reason? I don't know. Those would be good questions to ask a statistician.
A whole separate statistical question from the above is:
"What are the chances of a high-rise building totally collapsing due to fire AND a terrorist strike on two buildings next door leading to total progressive collapse of both buildings due to fire and damage?"
Obviously, that is a vanishingly small probability. NIST has admitted in its report that the collapse of WTC7 is virtually a separate event from the collapse of the Towers. And so analyzing the probabilities of these "extremely rare", independent events occurring simultaneously and in close proximity makes mathematical sense.