sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
Maybe I'm misunderstanding someone's position here, but this is the way this dispute appears to me:
Articulett: chance of winning via sticking with the first choice no matter what happens is just P(first pick is car).
Others: incorporating the added information once an event has happened gives the conditional probability P(first pick is car|info), which is not equal to P(first pick is car)
I don't understand why there is such a case of miscommunication. Those two claims are perfectly consistent.
Those two statements are correct (and therefore consistent). I repeated over and over to articulett that no one was disputing that the odds are 1/3 before taking into account the information from Monty opening the door, but that after taking it into account the odds change. She said I was wrong, and that the odds never change.
It's a bit like arguing with someone that says "the weather is clear" because it was clear on April 4th 1963, and when you point out its raining outside responds "the weather never changes" because, indeed, the weather on Aril 4th 1963 never changes.