wollery
Protected by Samurai Hedgehogs!
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2003
- Messages
- 11,308
Prometheus, if the probability of winning for a whole population is 99/100 by switching then the probability of winning for each individual player is 99/100 by switching. The probability of the whole population is the same as the probability of any single member of that population.
Likewise, if the probability for any single player is 50/50 then the probability for the whole population is 50/50. You can't divorce individual probability and group probability, one defines the other.
If I throw a die 600 times then on average I'll throw each number 100 times. The whole population probability of getting a 6 is 1/6. My individual probability of getting a 6 on any individual throw is 1/6.
Okay, let's look at the MH problem with 100 doors.
My individual probability of picking the right door right off the bat is 1/100. I know that there are 99 goats and MH is going to reveal 98 of them, but that doesn't change the probability of my first choice being correct, because I don't know where the car is or which doors MH is going to open. That he opens 98 doors doesn't change the fact that my choice was a 1/100 probability of picking the car. The door I have chosen still has a 1/100 probability of being the right door, even after 98 of the remaining 99 are opened. There's no miraculous change in probability.
Now wait a second, If I toss a coin my individual probability of getting the car is 50/50 because the group probability becomes 50/50, as I explained in my earlier post (you're averaging out the 1/100 probability with the 99/100 probability), but my best bet is to switch rather than toss a coin, because then my individual probability when switching is the same as the whole population probability for switching, which is 99/100. Tossing the coin makes my probability worse. So why on Earth would I toss a coin to make that decision? I practically halve my chances of winning by tossing a coin. It makes no sense to do it that way. If I understand the maths (and I do) I'm going to switch doors. Yes, there's a 1/100 chance I'm wrong, but there's a 99/100 chance I'm right, and I'll take those odds over a 50/50 every time.
With the switching tactic 1/100 people will lose. I feel sorry for them, but 99/100 will drive away in a new car. Why wouldn't anyone switch?
Seriously, actually try this stuff for yourself, run a trial in real life. Do it by always switching, then do it by always sticking, then do it by tossing a coin. The numbers don't lie, your best bet is always to switch doors, even though you only have two doors to choose between.
Likewise, if the probability for any single player is 50/50 then the probability for the whole population is 50/50. You can't divorce individual probability and group probability, one defines the other.
If I throw a die 600 times then on average I'll throw each number 100 times. The whole population probability of getting a 6 is 1/6. My individual probability of getting a 6 on any individual throw is 1/6.
Okay, let's look at the MH problem with 100 doors.
My individual probability of picking the right door right off the bat is 1/100. I know that there are 99 goats and MH is going to reveal 98 of them, but that doesn't change the probability of my first choice being correct, because I don't know where the car is or which doors MH is going to open. That he opens 98 doors doesn't change the fact that my choice was a 1/100 probability of picking the car. The door I have chosen still has a 1/100 probability of being the right door, even after 98 of the remaining 99 are opened. There's no miraculous change in probability.
Now wait a second, If I toss a coin my individual probability of getting the car is 50/50 because the group probability becomes 50/50, as I explained in my earlier post (you're averaging out the 1/100 probability with the 99/100 probability), but my best bet is to switch rather than toss a coin, because then my individual probability when switching is the same as the whole population probability for switching, which is 99/100. Tossing the coin makes my probability worse. So why on Earth would I toss a coin to make that decision? I practically halve my chances of winning by tossing a coin. It makes no sense to do it that way. If I understand the maths (and I do) I'm going to switch doors. Yes, there's a 1/100 chance I'm wrong, but there's a 99/100 chance I'm right, and I'll take those odds over a 50/50 every time.
With the switching tactic 1/100 people will lose. I feel sorry for them, but 99/100 will drive away in a new car. Why wouldn't anyone switch?
Seriously, actually try this stuff for yourself, run a trial in real life. Do it by always switching, then do it by always sticking, then do it by tossing a coin. The numbers don't lie, your best bet is always to switch doors, even though you only have two doors to choose between.