CurtC
Illuminator
Yes, there is a stable solution. Assuming, in game theory style, that Monty wants to hang on to his prize and you want to win it, then Monty would never offer the chance to switch if you picked the wrong door initially - he would just take his prize and your turn is over. Now lets's say that he sometimes offers the switch when you picked the right door - you, the player, would know that he is only offering you the choice because you picked the right door initially, so you would never switch. Since you never would switch, Monty, in this game theory world, would never bother to even offer it.Drooper said:Maybe, if we tried to apply game theory, we could get a more general solution (although under game theory there may not be a stable solution).
In theory, practice is the same as theory. In practice, it isn't. The difference in this case is that Monty wants an exciting game show, and wants to give prizes away sometimes. He would sometimes offer the switch, and sometimes wouldn't. The problem statement in the OP does not constrain him to always offering it, so we have no way of knowing what criteria he uses to decide whether to offer the switch, so the problem statement has no solution.
It looks like we have three holdouts here, maintaining that his motivations don't matter, that everything you need to know is that it was offered this time. This is wrong. You do need to know his motivation for why he offered you the switch. I first heard this problem 15 years ago, and have been active in debating it for most of those. It took me a while too to realize that his motivations matter, and that the problem can't be solved as it's stated in the OP. Guys, re-read the explanations. This is a settled matter. And TeaBag420, you really don't come across too well when you're insulting, belligerent, and wrong.