Odds can change as a result of new information. In this case, they don't, because the new information happens not to say anything about what's behind the contestant's door. (Of course, the new information does say something about what's behind the door that the host opened, and so its probability does change, from 1/3 down to 0.)I have read the last several pages, which is why I made the post. Somewhere back there, everyone agreed that the odds remain 1 in 3 for the original door after the host opens the empty door. This is wrong because the host opening an empty door added information to the puzzle, thereby changing the odds. Probablilities are used only when there is less than perfect knowledge, and when additional information becomes available, the odds are changed.
Suppose the contestant picks door A. At this moment in time, the probability is 1/3 that door A contains the prize. Now suppose the host opens door B. Here is the reason why the host's opening of door B tells us nothing new about whether door A contains the prize: prior to his opening a door, the probability that he would open B, rather than C, is the same on the assumption that A contains the prize as it is on the assumption that A doesn't contain the prize. (It's 1/2 in either case. If A contains the prize, the host chooses randomly between B and C, so B has probability 1/2 of being opened. If A is empty, the host opens whichever other door also is empty, and B has probability 1/2 of being that door, because B and C are equally likely to contain the prize and one of them is guaranteed to contain it if A doesn't.)