Someone once told me (rather testily) that we cannot speak of the "probability that a number is prime" because the sequence is deterministic. I think I understood his point but would like to make sure. There is a theorem in Stopple's Primer of Analytic Number Theory (p. 97):
The probability that a large integer $N$ is prime is about $\dfrac{1}{\log N}$.
Of course, a large integer N is either prime or it is not. Its status is completely determined by its predecessors.
As long as we are careful to define the sample space, is there anything here that is controversial? Are there other probability-related objections to Stopple's theorem?
Thanks for any insight.
Edit: This was a pedagogical device, not a theorem, as the answers below (and Stopple) make clear.