Poll: A little math problem

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FrcknFrckn

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838370 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838330 said:
Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838290 said:
The other what? The question was about a pair--saying 'the other one' makes no sense. That's like if someone asks you if you'd like french fries or baked potato, and you go 'the other one, please'.
No, it's more like if I have a penny and a quarter, one in each of my hands. I tell you one of my hands has a penny in it, and you ask for the coin in the OTHER HAND. Which hand is it, left or right? That's correct, you don't know - because talking about the OTHER HAND doesn't actually tell you which is which. I can't emphasize this enough: it doesn't give you any knowledge whatsoever about which hand I was referring to.
Well, if you tell me you've got one and only one coin in each hand, and you're holding pennies and quarters, and you tell me you've got a penny in one hand, then you've got a quarter in the other. If I ask for the coin in the other hand than the one that has penny--regardless of which hand it is--if it's not a quarter, then unless you were holding quantum coin, you were lying when you said you were holding pennies AND quarters.

As long as I know you're holding pennies and quarters, and one and only one coin in each hand, and I ask what's in the other hand from the penny hand, if it's not a quarter, how were you able to tell me you were holding "a penny and a quarter, one in each of my hands" in the first place?

Think about it for a second!
And now you're fixated on quarters. I'll try phrasing it differently so you don't get hung up again:

I have two coins, one in each of my hands. I tell you at least one of my hands has a penny in it, and you ask for the coin in the OTHER HAND. Which hand is it, left or right?

And before you go off talking about quantum this-and-that, try to get what I'm demonstrating here: talking about the 'other hand' doesn't change the coins in my hands, it doesn't give you any more information about the coins in my hands, it doesn't tell you which coin is a penny, or even if both coins are pennies. IT TELLS YOU NOTHING.
 

Alex_P

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838382 said:
Alex_P post=18.73797.838363 said:
Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838313 said:
And the parsimonious reading is also that when Puppy Washing Man goes "Yes!" he means that either both dogs are male or a specific dog in a male/female pair is male, not that he has knowledge that they are from Guaranteed Lesbo Free Puppy Pairs Breeder or some other kind of knowledge that there was screening of the FF pairs.
Of course.

... And that's how you get 33%.
EDIT my bad, thought you were replying to something else.

So for 20+ pages people have been arguing that the reason it's 33% is because we only know that the pair doesn't come from a pool with FFs, and that if we knew he was referring to a specific dog it would be 50%, and now you're saying that even if we know specifically what dog he's referring to, it's *still* 33%?
It all depends on who identifies which dog is the "referent."

There are two dogs, Jesus and Satan.

If you ask "Is Jesus male?" and the answer is "Yes," there is a 50% chance that Satan is male.

If you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Well, I noticed that Jesus is male," there is still only a 33% chance that Satan is male -- even though you specifically know Jesus is the male dog.

-- Alex
 

FrcknFrckn

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Alex_P post=18.73797.838416 said:
There are two dogs, Jesus and Satan.

If you ask "Is Jesus male?" and the answer is "Yes," there is a 50% chance that Satan is male.

If you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Well, Jesus is male," there is still only a 33% chance that Satan is male. Even though you specifically know Jesus is the male dog.

-- Alex
Actually, both those cases are 50%. In both, we end up with the same information: Jesus is male. We know nothing about Satan, so there's a 50% chance he's male or female.

The probability difference arises if you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Yes." In that situation, there is only a 33% chance that both Jesus and Satan is male.
 

Alex_P

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FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838427 said:
Alex_P post=18.73797.838416 said:
There are two dogs, Jesus and Satan.

If you ask "Is Jesus male?" and the answer is "Yes," there is a 50% chance that Satan is male.

If you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Well, Jesus is male," there is still only a 33% chance that Satan is male. Even though you specifically know Jesus is the male dog.

-- Alex
Actually, both those cases are 50%. In both, we end up with the same information: Jesus is male. We know nothing about Satan, so there's a 50% chance he's male or female.

The probability difference arises if you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Yes." In that situation, there is only a 33% chance that both Jesus and Satan is male.
No, read the second situation carefully.

The trick is that you're inviting the puppy-washer to decide which dog you're referring to, and he can always pick the more favorable answer. If Jesus were female he could've said "Yes, Satan is male" instead.

-- Alex
 

FrcknFrckn

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Alex_P post=18.73797.838442 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838427 said:
Alex_P post=18.73797.838416 said:
There are two dogs, Jesus and Satan.

If you ask "Is Jesus male?" and the answer is "Yes," there is a 50% chance that Satan is male.

If you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Well, Jesus is male," there is still only a 33% chance that Satan is male. Even though you specifically know Jesus is the male dog.

-- Alex
Actually, both those cases are 50%. In both, we end up with the same information: Jesus is male. We know nothing about Satan, so there's a 50% chance he's male or female.

The probability difference arises if you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Yes." In that situation, there is only a 33% chance that both Jesus and Satan is male.
No, read the second situation carefully.

The trick is that you're inviting the puppy-washer to decide which dog you're referring to, and he can always pick the more favorable answer. If Jesus were female he could've said "Yes, Satan is male" instead.

-- Alex
Ah, yeah, missed that... good point, objection retracted! :)
 

FrcknFrckn

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838450 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838415 said:
I have two coins, one in each of my hands. I tell you at least one of my hands has a penny in it, and you ask for the coin in the OTHER HAND.
You're changed the question too much. The question states: "What is the probability that the other one is a male?" The reason it tells us something is because it's coming directly from the question-asker, and therefore, gives us a clue as to how to resolve the ambiguity in the rest of the question.
Again, you're missing my point: talking about the 'other one' gives you absolutely no information, whether it comes from me, from you, or from some mystical quantum dog-washer.

And realistically, there is no ambiguity in the question. If you want to generate ambiguity, why not start questioning whether the shop owner is lying in order to make a sale? The thing about word problems is that, unless the question states otherwise, everything is pretty much normal. Why question the method of dog pair selection when the obvious answer is that it's just a random pair of dogs? Occam's razor and all that...
 

FrcknFrckn

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Dammit, why do I keep letting myself get dragged into these so-called discussions? Screw it, I'm going back to lurking and shaking my head quietly at the stupidity of it all...
 

FrcknFrckn

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838548 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838507 said:
Why question the method of dog pair selection when the obvious answer is that it's just a random pair of dogs? Occam's razor and all that...
You misunderstand Occam's Razor: it is not that the simplest explanation is the best, it is that in explanations, entities ought not to be multiplied except by necessity.

If ambiguity is found, that necessitates the multiplication of entities. Perfectly consistent with Occam's Razor.

And if you didn't think there was ambiguity in the problem, why were you arguing math with me? We should have been arguing about the whether the ambiguity exists. Otherwise you're doing no better than someone who argues the math of 36 numbers split into red and black to a person who thinks he's looking at a roulette wheel with a green zero on it.
Ambiguity = 0
Probability = 33%

I was arguing math with you in the faint hope that you'd finally 'get it'. But realistically, if after this many pages you still don't get it, you never will. Hence: bye!
 

Alex_P

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838484 said:
Alex_P post=18.73797.838442 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838427 said:
Actually, both those cases are 50%. In both, we end up with the same information: Jesus is male. We know nothing about Satan, so there's a 50% chance he's male or female.

The probability difference arises if you ask "Is at least one of them male?" and the answer is "Yes." In that situation, there is only a 33% chance that both Jesus and Satan is male.
No, read the second situation carefully.

The trick is that you're inviting the puppy-washer to decide which dog you're referring to, and he can always pick the more favorable answer. If Jesus were female he could've said "Yes, Satan is male" instead.
If a more favorable answer exists, then there's always one and only one dog that he can refer to--he can't "decide" you're referring to the other dog or "pick" any dog other than the one he picked without lying. If there are equally favorable answers and he can 'decide and pick' well then we're talking about an M/M pair anyways.

C'mon--now you guys are actually talking yourselves out of math that even the 33% people have agreed on for 20+ pages!
Well, this one is intentionally tricky.

First off, to avoid confusion: we're taking it for granted that the puppy-washer only tells you about one of them, okay? So if both are male he won't just shout "both" -- otherwise there's no point since you get perfect knowledge anyway.

Here's the catch:
P(Jesus is male | puppy-washer says "Jesus is male") = 1
BUT!
P(puppy-washer says "Jesus is male" | Jesus is male) < 1
Because if both are male he could have said "Satan is male" instead.

This speaks directly to the problem of referents we had ten pages ago.

Next post will contain the full Bayes-theorem write-up of this.

-- Alex
 

Jumplion

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I find this halarious.

How has this thread not fallen into the dark abyss of the internet already?
 

Faded gamer

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OuroborosChoked post=18.73797.809310 said:
Does it matter what gender the other dog is?
probly not,because no one is going to look down their,and if they do they are really weird.
 

geizr

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Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838450 said:
FrcknFrckn post=18.73797.838415 said:
I have two coins, one in each of my hands. I tell you at least one of my hands has a penny in it, and you ask for the coin in the OTHER HAND.
You're changed the question too much. The question states: "What is the probability that the other one is a male?" The reason it tells us something is because it's coming directly from the question-asker, and therefore, gives us a clue as to how to resolve the ambiguity in the rest of the question.
No, it doesn't, Cheeze. This is the constant error in your logic. The "other" does not refer to a specific dog because that requires that we know which is the first dog being referenced as male. And don't say that the problem is poorly worded, because it's not. However, your reading comprehension in this case is definitely in question. Let's break down the problem statement line by line.

A shopkeeper says she has two new baby beagles to show you, but she doesn't know whether they're male, female, or a pair. You tell her that you want only a male, and she telephones the fellow who's giving them a bath. "Is at least one a male?" she asks him. "Yes!" she informs you with a smile. What is the probability that the other one is a male?
A shopkeeper says she has two new baby beagles to show you, but she doesn't know whether they're male, female, or a pair.
We are told there are two beagles, but at this point it is unknown whether they are male or female. So, as far as we are concerned, the beagles can be any one of the combinations male/male, female/female, male/female, or female/male.

You tell her that you want only a male, and she telephones the fellow who's giving them a bath.
We have specified that we are only interested in purchasing a male beagle. However, what is more important is the fact there is someone who has access to both beagles simultaneously to be able to examine them for gender. This person examines the beagles while bathing them and obtains their genders.

"Is at least one a male?" she asks him. "Yes!" she informs you with a smile.
This is the first point where your logic falls off, Cheeze. The shopkeeper only asks whether at least one puppy is male, not which one. We don't know at this point if one or both puppies are male. In the case of only one being male, at this point, we don't know which one. We can not force the label on the male one to be dog1. Consider this scenario. The Puppy Washing Man picks up one puppy and looks at it and discovers it is male. At that point, he can truthfully answer the shopkeeper in the affirmative that at least one puppy is male. But, it could be that he picks up the first puppy and discovers it is female. So, he must then pick up and examine the second puppy to properly answer the shopkeeper. It is because we don't know what the Puppy Washing Man had to do to determine if there is at least one male that we get 3 total configurations possible.

What is the probability that the other one is a male?
This is where I think I understand how you are misunderstanding the problem statement, and it's not a matter of the question being poorly worded. We are told that at least one puppy is male. By including that the other one be male to obtain the probability, we are asking for the case that both puppies be male. But we don't know which one to start with to assign as being male. So mentally, we must consider two different scenarios: 1) dog1 is the male and dog2 is the other one, 2) dog2 is the male dog and dog1 is the other one. When you work out the outcomes from both these scenarios, you find there are a total of 3 unique configurations, with the male/male configuration being only 1 of the 3.

Your problem, Cheeze, is that you are constantly misunderstanding "the other one" to reference a specific puppy, and it doesn't. What the statement "the other one" is intended to do is to specify that we want both puppies to be male. It can not specify a specific puppy because we don't have a reference to which is the puppy that is known to be male. It is invalid to say that you can just choose one because you can't, precisely because we don't know if the Puppy Washing Man found the first one he picked up to be male or the second one he picked up to be male. Doing so would be to create extra information that is not given in the problem, which would mean that you are the only one who has been changing the problem all this time.

Another thing is that this kind of problem is what is known as a brain teaser. The wording of brain teasers is logically consistent and grammatically correct. But, they take advantage of the ambiguities of the English language to create statements that can be easily misinterpreted if one does not exercise careful reading comprehension. In fact, taking the statements of brain teasers at literal face value, as you have apparently done, will almost always lead you to exactly the wrong answer. You have to read the total context of the problem and comprehend the total action occurring in the problem.

Finally, if you really don't want to believe us, you can look the problem up on wikipedia. The wording is EXACTLY the same (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_vos_Savant [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_vos_Savant], look for the "Two Boys" problem). You can also check this link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boy_or_Girl_paradox [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boy_or_Girl_paradox], where they point out exactly the fallacies in logic that most people who choose 50% make.