• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Monty Hall Problem

Cabbage said:
But being specific is a fundamental part of mathematics! The specificity doesn't make the problem uninteresting, it makes the problem solvable. Are you claiming that simply adding the phrase "Mony always opens a door and offers a switch" would make an otherwise interesting problem pedantic and uninteresting?

Moreover, and I think more importantly, skeptics, if they're worth their salt, should be able to detect this kind of missing information.

Because the world is full of hucksters, and the world is full of inconclusive evidence, and skeptics by definition should be on guard against this kind of stuff.
 
Had a known that the fate of the rational world depended upon rigorously specifying the Monty Hall problem in Parade magazine, I would have been much less cavalier about it, and certainly would have used more bold words.

You people are over the top. :bowl:

I love you guys.

~~ Paul
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
It's not the problem that's pedantic, it's this discussion. By all means, though, clarify the standard wording of the problem. You're right, it won't hurt. But to claim that the problem as worded was ambiguous and thus could not serve its purpose to surprise people about their intuitions is ... well ... pedantic. In fact, I daresay that such a clarification would do absolutely no good for the very people the problem is meant to educate.


Absolutely clear. All I was saying is that seems like precisely the default assumption, given no mention of any conditions whatsoever.


:D Just yanking your chain. Actually, though, "randomly picking" has the connotation of picking sometimes and not picking other times, whereas "picking randomly" has the connotation you want. But maybe that's just me.

But continue on. I have no idea why the probability of picking an even integer isn't .5.

~~ Paul
If it's absolutely clear that the 2/3 vs. 1/3 solution does involve making an assumption, then I don't really have a problem with your opinion on the problem. For the record, I agree, it looks to me like whoever wrote the problem probably intended it to be interpreted the way many people do--that Monty always opens a door and offers a switch. There is that subtle ambiguity there, however, and I think it's much preferable to add that statement to the problem for clarity. What can it possibly hurt? The problem is still as tricky as ever, and now it is unambiguous.

In general, poorly worded problems frustrate me, and some textbooks have more than their share. Personal anecdote: When I was a freshman in college taking a physics class, I remember struggling with one particular homework problem. The idea of the problem was: A man throws a ball at a certain velocity (under earth's gravity). How far does the ball travel? The answer was in the back of the book, but I couldn't figure out how to get it. It seemed to me that the height of the man would matter--Why wasn't I given that information? After playing around with it for a while, I finally realized--You had to assume that at the instant the ball was thrown, its initial position was ground level. Who the hell throws and releases a ball at ground level? A perfect example of a poorly worded problem.
Anyway, about the positive integers problem. I have no idea what sort of responses I may have gotten, but here's a quick rundown of the point I was planning on making in a Socratic dialogue:

Poster: Wouldn't it be 1/2? Only half of the integers are even, the other half are odd?

Me: What do you mean, both sets are infinite! How is one infinity twice as large as another? In fact, there is a bijection between them: f(n)=2n gives a 1-1 correspondence between the even integers and all of the positive integers. The two sets are the same size, or cardinality. There are sets with larger cardinalities, but these both have the same cardinality--cardinality aleph-naught.

Poster: Well, what I meant was, look at how they're ordered: 1, 2, 3, 4, .... Every other one is even. That's what I meant when I said half of them are even--every other one.

Me: Ah, I see where you're going with this now! However, what makes you think this order you're accustomed to is relevant? That's an assumption! What if some omnipotent deity took all of the positive integers, tossed them into an infinitely large urn, and then selected one at random? Now you have infinitely many integers, and infinitely many of them are even! Furthermore, they're all scrambled up now! What now?

Poster: Well, I would imagine that each integer has an equally likely chance of coming up, but since it's infinitely many out of infinitely many, I'm not sure how to evaluate that.

Me: I only brought up the omnipotent deity as a thought experiment; if we want to follow along those lines, and assume that each integer has an equally likely chance of coming up, that is yet another assumption! Is that what you wish to do?

Poster: Yes.

Me: Fair enough, we'll work under that assumption and see what happens. So every number is as likely as any other number to be selected? OK, let's call that probability p, where p is some number strictly between 0 and 1.

Poster: OK

Me: Now refer back to the Kolmogorov probability axioms, our probability function must be countably additive. So the probability of picking any number (which should obviously be a full probability of 1) will be the infinite sum of all the probabilities of the individual integers. That is, the countable sum from 1 to infinity of the positive constant p. What is that sum?

Poster: It diverges. It's infinite.

Me: Hmmm...That's a problem isn't it? it was supposed to be just 1. It doesn't make any sense to have infinite probability.
Poster: Well maybe the probability of picking a particular integer isn't positive. Maybe each integer has zero probability of being picked!

Me: An interesting idea, but we've got a problem there, too. Like before, what's the sum from 1 to infinity of the constant zero?

Poster: Zero.

Me: Exactly. Again, it needs to be 1 in order for us to have a probability model.

Poster: What now?

Me: Well, we've reached a dead end with this assumption. The probability of picking an individual integer has to be zero or one, and either possibility leads to an impossibility. Our initial assumption that each integer is just as likely as any other is faulty--that situation can't happen....

[end dialogue]

Anyway, I'm only (once again) trying to illustrate that we should always be clear when we make assumptions and what those assumptions are. In some cases, like this one, it's entirely possible to find out our assumptions don't make any sense. (Obviously that wasn't going to be a problem with the Monty Hall problem, but, in general terms, always be aware of your assumptions).
 
CurtC said:
Paul and Bill, I think we all agree that the probability will be very different depending on whether the host always offers the switch, or offers it only if you picked right initially, etc., in other words, his strategy. And we all agree that if he was constrained to offer the switch without regard to your initial pick, that the answer is 2/3 in favor of switching.

Universal agreement on these, in my experience with this problem, is quite an accomplishment.

The only thing we seem to still disagree on is whether, in the problem statement as commonly stated, it's reasonable to assume that Monty's offer to switch would have been granted independent of your first guess. I have to admit that I can't understand the position that the assumption is warranted. Since you two are the ones making it, could you defend it? I'm curious how the reasoning would go. (I'm explicitly not inviting TeaBag420 to respond, because his m.o. so far has been to spew insults and exasperation with no substance.)

If I'm "curt" with you, it's because time is a factor here. Bluck me, motherfower.
 
Haven't we assumed the probability of picking a given integer = 0 in various other conversations we've had here? I thought that was because it was infinitessimally small, so we called it zero. But all the probabilities would still add up to 1. No?

So what do we say when we run this experiment a bunch of times and half the integers are even? Sounds almost supernatural now.

In general, poorly worded problems frustrate me, and some textbooks have more than their share.
I'm with you there, man! I find stupid problems in my kids' math books all the time. You put the Monty Hall problem in my kid's math book, I expect it to be unambiguously worded.

I think I may have just pedanticized myself in the foot.

~~ Paul
 
epepke said:
Moreover, and I think more importantly, skeptics, if they're worth their salt, should be able to detect this kind of missing information.

Because the world is full of hucksters, and the world is full of inconclusive evidence, and skeptics by definition should be on guard against this kind of stuff.

Yeah, if only someone had pointed out that the shell game was a con.

Was man nicht kennt, darum muss man steigen.

Or something pretty close to that.
 
Here, YET AGAIN, for my learning disabled friends (you retarts know who you are) is the original MTP:

"Suppose you're on a game show, and you're given the choice of three doors: Behind one door is a car; behind the others, goats. You pick a door, say No. 1, and the host, who knows what's behind the other doors, opens another door, say No. 3, which has a goat. He then says to you, 'Do you want to pick door No. 2?' Is it to your advantage to take the switch?"

Guess what? It doesn't ask about the probability. MARILYN CHANGED THE PROBLEM (BTW, FU Mr. Reading Comprehension). A lot of you seem to be saying the problem is defective. WHERE HAVE I HEARD THAT BEFORE?

The answer of course is yes, switch.

More later.

Don't forget the unspoken assumption that the third door is NOT numbered "9".

What if you already had a car but you always wanted a goat?

What if pigs had wings?
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Haven't we assumed the probability of picking a given integer = 0 in various other conversations we've had here? I thought that was because it was infinitessimally small, so we called it zero. But all the probabilities would still add up to 1. No?
I don't remember ever talking about that here (not that it didn't necessarily happen), but it's been brought up a few times on the Straight Dope board that I post regularly on; do you ever post over there?

Anyway, yes, that's a very interesting question. Like I said, it's impossible in standard probability theory, but I believe it is possible in something called nonstandard probability, where instead of assigning an event a standard probability from the real interval [0,1], you assign the event a nonstandard probability, from the hyperreal (or surreal) interval [0,1]. That would include infinitesimals, so you could say each integer has a certain (nonzero) infinitesimal chance of getting picked. That's about all I know of nonstandard probability theory, though.

So what do we say when we run this experiment a bunch of times and half the integers are even? Sounds almost supernatural now.

There are, of course, (nonuniform) probability functions on the positive integers, but any question like, "What's the probability of picking an even integer?" are unanswerable without specifying a particular model.
 
Should have been:

"Does he always open the door? It makes a difference, you know."

"Yes, he always opens the door."

"Ok."

Instead, it was:

"You know, the OP never said if he always opened the door, and you know you can't answer the question unless you know that, it's unanswerable and so many people make the mistake of assuming he always does but maybe he doesn't and if that's the assumption then they're just wrong because it does make a big difference, you know it might be a con game where he only shows you a door if he knows you picked the good prize and if you didn't he might not give you the choice so in that case you really have to know what he does and the OP didn't tell us but he should have because, well, you people just shouldn't make assumptions like you did because that's just sloppy and I can't stand sloppy thinking and I am just so much better than you other dorks and idiots here because I don't miss the implied assumptions and won't let that sort of thing that always drives me crazy go without putting up a good pedantic argument about it."

See the difference?

Now, what are the odds that a thread like this would attract a pedant like that?
 
garys_2k said:
Should have been:

"Does he always open the door? It makes a difference, you know."

"Yes, he always opens the door."

"Ok."

Instead, it was:

"You know, the OP never said if he always opened the door, and you know you can't answer the question unless you know that, it's unanswerable and so many people make the mistake of assuming he always does but maybe he doesn't and if that's the assumption then they're just wrong because it does make a big difference, you know it might be a con game where he only shows you a door if he knows you picked the good prize and if you didn't he might not give you the choice so in that case you really have to know what he does and the OP didn't tell us but he should have because, well, you people just shouldn't make assumptions like you did because that's just sloppy and I can't stand sloppy thinking and I am just so much better than you other dorks and idiots here because I don't miss the implied assumptions and won't let that sort of thing that always drives me crazy go without putting up a good pedantic argument about it."

See the difference?

Now, what are the odds that a thread like this would attract a pedant like that?

Which one are you talking about?
 
TeaBag420 said:
Here, YET AGAIN, for my learning disabled friends (you retarts know who you are) is the original MTP:

"Suppose you're on a game show, and you're given the choice of three doors: Behind one door is a car; behind the others, goats. You pick a door, say No. 1, and the host, who knows what's behind the other doors, opens another door, say No. 3, which has a goat. He then says to you, 'Do you want to pick door No. 2?' Is it to your advantage to take the switch?"

Guess what? It doesn't ask about the probability.

I'm happy to see a non-probabilistic analysis.

The answer of course is yes, switch.

Gee, I guess I'm a learning disabled retart, but somehow that doesn't look like an analysis.

Could you amplify just a little? Starting by defining "to your advantage"?
 
TeaBag420 said:
Which one are you talking about?
:D

Yeah, there are several. I was thinking of the leafy garden plant, though. the one with "a short stem and a dense globular head of usually green leaves that is used as a vegetable" (or so says Merriam-Webster).
 
CurtC said:
Cecil Adams put it well in his column on the subject:
Your analysis of the game show question is correct, Bobo, only if we make several assumptions: (1) Monty Hall knows which door conceals the prize; (2) he only opens doors that do NOT conceal the prize; and (3) he always opens a door. Assumptions #1 and #2 are reasonable. #3 is not.
Actually, there's a fourth assumption: that he never opens your own door. Imagine this situation: suppose one of the goats starts braying. Monty Hall says "Well, I guess we know that one is not a car." and opens that door, revealing the goat. Should you switch?

epepke said:
I admire your tenacity, Cabbage, but seriously, it's a lot easier and more satisfying to win free drinks and meals off of these people. I've found empirically to about a 90% confidence rate that they just don't listen. And so, you can win a free drink or meal nine times out of ten, and who will give you better odds than that?
If you're relying on empiricism, don't you have an expectation of 3/10 of a free meal? 90% don't listen, but of those, one third will luck out and win anyway.
 
Originally posted by epepke
I admire your tenacity, Cabbage, but seriously, it's a lot easier and more satisfying to win free drinks and meals off of these people. I've found empirically to about a 90% confidence rate that they just don't listen. And so, you can win a free drink or meal nine times out of ten, and who will give you better odds than that?

How long does it take you to convinince them that you have a bigger penis, um, I mean, that they have failed to solve the problem. It's been days here and statistically I would bet that someone has a bigger penis than you.

Being right and getting paid are two different things, Swinging Dick. I smell a liar.
 
Originally posted by Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Haven't we assumed the probability of picking a given integer = 0 in various other conversations we've had here? I thought that was because it was infinitessimally small, so we called it zero. But all the probabilities would still add up to 1. No?
No, but you can do a similar thing with real numbers.

You can randomly pick a real number between, say, 3 and 8. In this case, the probability of any single number is 0. But just looking at the probability of single numbers misses the main idea here. The probability of picking 6.5 is 0; the probability of picking 12.5 is also 0. So then what does it mean to say that we're picking a number between 3 and 8?? It means we can say things like, the probability is 1/5 that the number is between 6 and 7 but the probability is 0 that it's between 12 and 13. The meat is in the probability of intervals, not in the probability of individual points.
So what do we say when we run this experiment a bunch of times and half the integers are even?
What experiment? How would you actually go about generating random integers?

You can generate random bits easily enough: just flip a coin. But how do you turn them into a random integer?

You can turn them into a random real number between 0 and 1 by sticking a radix point in front of them. (To get a number between 3 and 8, just multiply by 5 and then add 3.) Of course, you'll have to flip the coin forever if you want to get a specific number; but each successive flip narrows the range down, so that only a finite number of flips are needed to decide whether the number is between 6 and 7, or between 12 and 13. And if you use this method to generate a real number between 3 and 8, the probability is indeed 1/5 that it will be between 6 and 7, and indeed 0 that it will be between 12 and 13.
 
Good point, dodge. We can generate random integers between 1 and n, but then each has a probability of 1/n and half are even. But we cannot generate random integers between 1 and infinity, so it's difficult to run the experiment.

Why can we assume the probability is zero for picking real numbers, but not for integers? The set has to be uncountably infinite?

Cabbage, we assumed a probability of zero during a conversation started in one of Interesting Ian's threads. It's this gargantuan monster, I think:

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=43483&highlight=probability

~~ Paul
 
rppa said:
You will never settle it once and for all.

The answer depends on Monty's rules of behavior.

Indeed. One needs to ask 2 questions.

a) Does Monty know which door the car is behind.

b) If he does, then what's his game? In other words what's he trying to make you do. Also pertinent here would be the question of whether he knows you are familiar with this question, and familiar with all possible responses etc. It's a psychological game.

Want to create even more arguments? Here's another one that has the net bitterly divided:

You meet a woman with her son. She tells you she has two children. What is the probability the other child is a boy? [/B]

Just over half at a guess. I lack the info to give a specific response though.
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Good point, dodge. We can generate random integers between 1 and n, but then each has a probability of 1/n and half are even. But we cannot generate random integers between 1 and infinity, so it's difficult to run the experiment.

Why can we assume the probability is zero for picking real numbers, but not for integers? The set has to be uncountably infinite?

Yes, sort of. It's a little more technical than that, I think. The key thing is that the integral of the probability density over the set of possible values has to be equal to 1. That is, the probability that X lies somewhere in the set of possibilities better be 1.

Maybe the easiest way to say it is this: the sum of a countable number of 0's is 0. But the sum of an uncountable number of 0's can be nonzero.

On the other hand, if you wanted a non-uniform distribution over all integers, that would be possible. For instance suppose you wanted
P(X=n) = a/n^2, n=1, 2, ...

Since the sum (1/n^2) from 1 to infinity is some finite value (called zeta(2)), setting a = 1/zeta(2) makes this add up to 1.
 
epepke said:
As I said, I have empirical evidence that this cannot be explained. It just bounces off people's foreheads. That's why I prefer to win drinks off of them.

However, with full expectation that few people will read this, and those who read it will fight it, I feel comfortable in saying the following. Nothing in the original question to vos Savant indicated that Monty is in any way obligated to offer a choice. For all you know, he could only offer you the choice if you had picked the curtain with the car. Which means that a strategy to pick the other curtain would fail 100% of the time.

Yes absolutely.

But people are just so terribly impressed with themselves for understanding what is essentially the kind of math that should reasonably be expected from a 14-year-old that they work terribly hard to avoid the obvious conclusion. Which means they suck at being skeptics. Which is why I don't feel bad for winning free drinks off of them and humiliating them in front of their peers. Because skeptics should think about these things. [/B]

So apparently I don't suck at being a skeptic :D

I know I know . .logical fallacy LOL
 

Back
Top Bottom