Where to begin! In addition to having absolutely nothing to do with the original question about the difference between "dependent" and "independent" events, eNathan's answer is simple nonsense!
"The probability of Event A happening is
How many times you take the chance divided by how many posible outcomes there are. "
No, it has nothing to do with "how many times you take the chance". In simple discrete probability it is the number of outcomes that correspond to event A divided by the total number of possible outcomes.
"Now if you flip that coin two times, your chances are \frac{2}{2}= 1 So you have a 100% chance of getting either a heads or a tails (if you flip the coin twice)."
Number of "times you flip" divided by number of outcomes (head or tail: 2)! But as I said, that's completely wrong. The correct calculation here is: if you flip a coin twice, there are four possible outcomes: (H,H) (heads on both first and second flips), (H,T) (heads on first flip, tails on second), (T,H) (tails on first flip, heads on second), (T,T) (tails on both first and second flip). I'm not sure what he means by "getting either a head or a tail. If you flip a coin ONCE you are certain to get either heads of tails! eNathan may be saying that since the probability of getting heads on one flip is 1/2 and the probability of getting heads on one flip is 1/2, the probabililty of getting "heads and tails" (not "or") is 1/2+ 1/2= 1. No, the probability of getting heads on the first flip and heads on the second is (1/2)*(1/2)= 1/4- you multiply, not add.
Or, he may be arguing that since the probability of "a or b" is prob(a)+ prob(b) (for "mutally exclusive" events- the more general formula is prob(a)+prob(b)-prob(a and b)), the probability of getting heads or tails is 1/2+ 1/2. That's true- on one flip, not two. Since the coin can only come up heads or tails, the probability of getting heads or tails on one flip 1- it's certain to happen.
"This reminds me...I have been wanting to post a thread on this question, but I suppose it won't harm to throw it in right now. If you flip a coin twice, your chances of getting a heads (for instsance) is 100%, but there still IS a chance that you won't get heads. Is this just how the mathematics of chance operate?"
No, if you flip a coin twice, the probability of getting a head (at least one) is 75%: you could get two heads:probability (1/2)(1/2)= 1/4. You could get a head on the first flip and tail on the second: probability (1/2)(1/2)= 1/4. You could get a tail on the first flip and a head on the second: probability (1/2)(1/2)= 1/4. Probability of getting at least one head is 1/4+ 1/4+ 1/4= 3/4. (Probability of getting exactly one head, if that was what was meant, if 1/4+1/4= 1/2.)
eNathan- if the result of your reasoning is non-sense, you should at least consider the possibility (if not "probability") that it is your reasoning that is at fault rather than mathematics!