Plus one...The only thing I care about is you changing your avatar back
or should that be plus two?
Plus one...The only thing I care about is you changing your avatar back
When young (and dumb) I made a ton of money one afternoon in Vegas expermenting with Martingale....
It’s like the martingale system gambling. Always loses.
...
Same thing for me in RenoWhen young (and dumb) I made a ton of money one afternoon in Vegas expermenting with Martingale.
Thought I found the holy grail.
Colored up an swore they shorted me a few chips. No problem, I'll win that back right quick.
Lost the whole roll in a couple of minutes.
First and last time for that.
The only thing I care about is you changing your avatar back
You know where the car is 100% of the timeIt matters because I know where the car is 66% if the time.
I can literally tell you which of the two doors the car is…..
66 times out of 100
You know where the car is 100% of the time
You lost me on this logic - you are overthinking this.Here's what makes the problem both interesting and confusing. The choices are not "always switch" or "always keep". There is a third choice that makes your chances of winning 50/50. Let your choice be determined by a flip of a coin. If you initially chose right (1/3) half of that time you will give away a winner while half of the rest of the time you will keep a loser. That's 1/6 + 1/3 = 1/2 of the time you will lose. That's why people who assume the decision to keep/switch is 50/50 say there's a 50/50 chance of winning, and if they choose to make that decision 50/50 or close to it (by listening to the audience, for example) they're right. They make it 50/50 by assuming it's 50/50 and introducing a 50/50 event into their decision.
You lost me on this logic - you are overthinking this.
Depends on the scenario. The exact scenario says you pick a door. Then the host opens a door showing a goat and gives you the option.
If you knew going in that he was going to open the door and show a goat, you should have already made the decision to switch.
If you didn’t, know that, then he opens a door and reveals a goat, even if it was random and he could have opened the car, you now have additional information you didn’t have. Then he offers the switch.
It would be the same as two players in a hold ‘em game. One had a big decision and the other turns over one of their cards. There was the decision before that that was proper for the scenario and there was a decision after that is proper with the added information.
The only reason I say he has to open the goat or bring up that he knows what’s behind the doors is to highlight the odds to the non believers.
You pick a door and it’s a 33% chance.
If Monty doesn’t know what’s behind the cards, it’s also 33% that he picks a goat or the car. But if he knows where the car is, and is not allowed to pick it, then it’s 66%.
But, the actual scenario is that you pick a door. Then you’re shown an open door with a goat. Then you are given a choice of keeping or swapping. Is it to your advantage to swap?
That sounds like semantics, however in game theory and such, it’s extremely important to have the exact order of options and information if one is to take the example and extrapolate it to be useful decision making.
I agree. See my post on page 15 (#289) and my most recent post.This might be one of my favorite threads because of how wrong some people are and they dont have a clue about it.
I am not trying to convince anyone of anything here. I will just explain how I see it.
I choose a door. I know that at least one of the doors I didnt choose is a goat. Now lets say for arguments sake that after I have chosen my door nothing is revealed and I am given the option of staying with my door and trading for the two remaining doors. The decision with the best odds is to trade for the other door even though I know that one of them is a goat. The host revealing the goat doesnt change the odds. I am at either one third (my first choice) or two thirds (trading). The fact that the goat is revealed does not change a thing. I already knew it was there.
Instead of doors imagine it a dating scenario. Your potential spouse is behind one door and the other two are short term relationships.
If you pick right the first try there is no need for switching. Picking the spouse in a group of three vs picking the spouse in a group of two what difference does it make? Its exactly the dating to wedding scenario.
How often do you hear about people being left at the marital ceremony?
The argument about math and modeling only works academically or for standardized tests. This thread feels worthy for technical job interviews.
True, but you said you know where the car is 66% of the time when it's actually 100%The contestant can never know where it is 100% of the time.
Now I'm pissed... Your comment made unblock him. There goes a few more brain cells....I literally said “what the fuck” out loud.
I wish this was a troll post. It would be amazing.
True, but you said you know where the car is 66% of the time when it's actually 100%
I only read the first 10 pages or so. Did Major Miscue ever come around?![]()