Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
hgc said:Yes, when people communicate via human language, they make assumptions about meanings of words and phrases based on shared cultural experiences. If you want to engage in pedantic nitpickery you can uncover all kinds of bogus ambiguity.
Who didn't know, unquestionably, that the picking of the door was for receiving the prize behind that door? Raise you hands. I can understand that some puzzles are constructed with tricky loopholes hidden in the precise construct of the question. No reason to think that this is such a puzzle. This is a puzzle about probability.
You are utterly determined to miss the point aren't you? The point I was making is that we have to assume.
I originally made the assumption that the second choice was part of the rules of the game and everyone jumped all over me and said "but it depends on the intentions of the host" because the problem does not explicitly state that Monty was obliged to offer the choice.
I had assumed that all information required answer the puzzle had been supplied and if the offer of second choice was only optional that would have been stated.
So my assumption that Monty had to offer the second choice is being called unreasonable.
But the alternative assumption that Monty did not have to offer the second choice is not regarded as unreasonable.
So my question is what is the criteria for any assumption being reasonable? That was the point I was making.
This is a puzzle about probability.
Incidentally and let's be crystal clear about this:
It is a probability problem if and only if Monty was obliged to reveal the goat and offer the second choice
In which case it was settled long ago and why are we arguing?