Posterior is what you figure out after looking at some clues or evidence.
Imagine you have a bag full of different kinds of candies, chocolates, gummies, and lollipops. You can’t see inside the bag, but you take out a few pieces one by one. Each time you pull out a candy, it gives you a clue about what might be inside the whole bag. After pulling out several candies, you start to guess: What kind of candy is most common in the bag? That guess, based on the candies you've seen so far, is your posterior.
Like Making a Guess Based on What You See
Think about it like playing a game of "Guess Who?" with your friend. At first, you don’t know who your friend has picked. But as they give you clues, They have glasses, They are wearing a hat, you start to narrow down the possibilities. Each clue helps you make a better guess. That process is just like how posterior works: it’s your best guess after seeing some evidence.
So, posterior means "what we think now", based on what we've seen or learned before.
Examples
- The posterior side of a book is where you hold it.
- In math class, the teacher explains that the posterior of a shape is its back part.
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See also
- How Does Every Higher Dimensional Geometry Shape Explained Work?
- Can a geodesic always be extended?
- How Does The Real Reason Pi Appears Everywhere Work?
- How Does The Shape That Always Wins at Everything Work?
- How Does The Shape That Actually Wins at Everything Work?