Poll: A little math problem

Recommended Videos

Captain Wes

New member
Sep 10, 2008
339
0
0
SeymourB post=18.73797.809682 said:
edit -- but idgaf i just found this login on a website so i could educate you fags.

and this kid is a 3rd year math major, so fuck you
AND THATS THE WAY IT IS
no, it isn't. I've listened to your arguments and responded, you just keep saying the same thing in the same way only with insults. Very intelligent
 

LV Solace

New member
May 8, 2008
130
0
0
I'd assume a third year math major would have a descent grasp on grammar, and typing skills, not to mention common descency. CAPS locking, and using derogitory language is almost always a sign of immaturity, something that is not often found in third year math majors.

and your point is saying that the first beagle being male has a definite effect on the second beagle? It cant. a third year math major would know that.
 

Captain Wes

New member
Sep 10, 2008
339
0
0
LV Solace post=18.73797.809692 said:
I'd assume a third year math major would have a descent grasp on grammar, and typing skills, not to mention common descency. CAPS locking, and using derogitory language is almost always a sign of immaturity, something that is not often found in third year math majors.

and your point is saying that the first beagle being male has a definite effect on the second beagle? It cant. a third year math major would know that.
thank you, i'm truly open to being swayed on this but just being a prick isn't the way to do it. Taxi driver almost had me on it but then I got caught up in the seymor and gained new vitality.
 

LV Solace

New member
May 8, 2008
130
0
0
Actually independent events mean everything in this problem. And I'd like to think my avatar has nothing to do with my points, it's simply what I choose to represent my image.
 

Jumplion

New member
Mar 10, 2008
7,873
0
0
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
God damnit!

I can't believe I'm being judged as a human being based on my grammar. It is not like that makes any difference. As long as I am understood, what difference does my usage of grammar make? Surely you have read Flowers for Algernon.

I can cut the ignorance with a knife. Its like they're trying to put words in my mouth. Independent events don't mean anything in this problem. I never said anything of the sort, LV Solace with the retarded anime avatar.

God, I hate internet forums.
Be that as it may, you're in the Escapist now.

A glorious place full of magic and wonder and cheap whores.

However, those cheap whores come at a heavier effort to obtain.

As such, they like politeness, correct punctuality, and being a good forum goer.

You however are name calling and making a math molehill into a mountain AND not to mention you're threatening us and being a general jackass.

Now be gone, and do your probability homework you have been telling us about!

And I like LV's avatar, it's so cute.
 

imperialwar

New member
Jun 17, 2008
371
0
0
sorry but i gave up reading after the top of page 2.
The problem i have with the question is that the woman doesn't know the sex of the dogs, so when they get the dogs back from the bather unless he gives them an identifier, she still isn't going to know which one he had picked out to confirm the male.
 

Jumplion

New member
Mar 10, 2008
7,873
0
0
I have to wonder though, can't they just check "down there"? Or, as GhostofSin said, it could be a hermphodite...
 

milskidasith

New member
Jul 4, 2008
531
0
0
It's a badly worded problem, that's all. You could argue about it for days, but the point is, it wasn't clear enough to make you sure if it's 50% or 33%.
 

Shivari

New member
Jun 17, 2008
706
0
0
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?

The reason this problem tricked me is because of the wording. It's not testing my abilities, it's testing if it can trick me or not.

SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
God damnit!

I can't believe I'm being judged as a human being based on my grammar. It is not like that makes any difference. As long as I am understood, what difference does my usage of grammar make?
I have no idea what some of your abbreviations meant, and the reason people are reporting you is because you're swearing like a sailor and generally trying to start a conflict.
 

milskidasith

New member
Jul 4, 2008
531
0
0
Shivari post=18.73797.809721 said:
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?
It's a 25% chance they both fail... If one already failed, it is 33%, assuming they were both tested to see if they would fail at the same time. If you actually made one, had it fail, and made another with the same 50% chance of failing, it would be 50% because it isn't a set, just two seperate coinflips.
 

Karka

New member
Oct 12, 2008
1
0
0
I admit I haven't read all the replies but here goes. The first dog has no bearing on the second dog, basic math explains that to us. Now, on to the second dog. The dog can either be male or female giving it a 50/50 chance. It's like a coin or anything that has two options. I have a minor in math this question just seems silly....
 

Shivari

New member
Jun 17, 2008
706
0
0
milskidasith post=18.73797.809735 said:
Shivari post=18.73797.809721 said:
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?
It's a 25% chance they both fail... If one already failed, it is 33%, assuming they were both tested to see if they would fail at the same time. If you actually made one, had it fail, and made another with the same 50% chance of failing, it would be 50% because it isn't a set, just two seperate coinflips.
See, it just seems like a stupid misplacement of words that isn't really important. I don't see how it makes a difference if you flip two coins across the room and look at one, or if you flip one and then flip another. The second is independent from the first, it's still 50%

It's a stupid rule.
 

Jumplion

New member
Mar 10, 2008
7,873
0
0
milskidasith post=18.73797.809735 said:
Shivari post=18.73797.809721 said:
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?
It's a 25% chance they both fail... If one already failed, it is 33%, assuming they were both tested to see if they would fail at the same time. If you actually made one, had it fail, and made another with the same 50% chance of failing, it would be 50% because it isn't a set, just two seperate coinflips.
BUT, if we count the two coins as a set then it would be 33% right?

It's like Shivari's saying, it's the damn wording of the problem. If the wording was correct, I might understand this a bit more, but it's a stupid trick question.

Hate trick-questions unless I'm the one telling them!
 

werepossum

New member
Sep 12, 2007
1,103
0
0
Jumplion post=18.73797.809688 said:
SNIP
OH, OH, OH! Okay, now I understand, I remember seeing a problem or two like that (most notably in the movie "21"), now I get why it's 33%.

But the one thing that's nagging me is that, lets say, if the other copper mine struck, erm, copper than the other one still has 50% chance without putting the one that struck copper into effect....right? But unless that fuel rod was in direct explosive radius of the other fuel rod, the one that was defective still wouldn't have any real effect on the other one.....

Okay, maybe I don't get it yet.
SNIP
Nah, you get it. My examples were probably not that good, but in both examples the same principal - that knowing the value of one member of a set affects the probability spread of the other members' values - was the same as in the original problem. I was attempting to show (crudely) how this can be important for people other than engineers or mathematicians. If you randomly selected two mine sites and one struck copper, the chance for the second is that you randomly selected two winners, NOT the chance that any one mine will strike copper. Similarly, if you randomly select two fuel rods and one fails, the probability of the other failing is the probability that you randomly selected two defective fuel rods, NOT the chance of any individual fuel rod being defective. This sort of thing can be very important in engineering, although hopefully a critical component with a 50% failure rate will have more than one back-up. In any case, the probability function in question is the composition of the set you selected, not the probability function of each member's possible values.

A more likely scenario would be a system with five widgets, each with a 5% defective rate. If at least three widgets must be in working order for proper operation and one widget is observed to fail, what is the chance two more widgets from the five randomly selected for the system will fail? Now imagine the system is a $300,000,000 satellite and a repair mission costs $25,000. Do you schedule a repair mission, or do you wait and hope more widgets don't fail? Variations of this kind of problem are reasonably common, and an incorrect understanding of probability and statistics can sink a company.

My point was that understanding set probability versus sequential probability is important for everyone, but it can be VERY important for some.

The same thing can be expanded to include coin tosses. If you toss two coins, you will have a distribution of possible results analogous to the pup gender question. The result of each coin toss is independent from the other. But the probability of the set of both coin tosses follows a rigid structure. Knowing one coin's result changes the probability of the other coin's result. As Dirtface said, it's the Monte Hall problem.
 

werepossum

New member
Sep 12, 2007
1,103
0
0
milskidasith post=18.73797.809735 said:
Shivari post=18.73797.809721 said:
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?
It's a 25% chance they both fail... If one already failed, it is 33%, assuming they were both tested to see if they would fail at the same time. If you actually made one, had it fail, and made another with the same 50% chance of failing, it would be 50% because it isn't a set, just two seperate coinflips.
Exactly correct.
 

Shivari

New member
Jun 17, 2008
706
0
0
werepossum post=18.73797.809779 said:
But the probability of the set of both coin tosses follows a rigid structure. Knowing one coin's result changes the probability of the other coin's result.
But it's independent from the other one. It's a stupid trick.

Or this might be way over my head and I should just leave. I take it you learn these evil and useless tricks in later years.
 

Jumplion

New member
Mar 10, 2008
7,873
0
0
werepossum post=18.73797.809779 said:
Great Wall of Text
Oh hO! Now I get it, yet again the wording of the problem is to blame.

Taxi Driver post=18.73797.809777 said:
And who is this amazing god-like being that discovered the root of this trickery?
Fine, I'll have your stick avatar running over people done by the end of the week, how's that sound?
 

werepossum

New member
Sep 12, 2007
1,103
0
0
Shivari post=18.73797.809752 said:
milskidasith post=18.73797.809735 said:
Shivari post=18.73797.809721 said:
SeymourB post=18.73797.809708 said:
If you know the chance of a fuel rod failing from a defect is 50% and one of your two fuel rods has failed, what are the odds your new death star is going to suffer complete power failure?
25% right?
It's a 25% chance they both fail... If one already failed, it is 33%, assuming they were both tested to see if they would fail at the same time. If you actually made one, had it fail, and made another with the same 50% chance of failing, it would be 50% because it isn't a set, just two seperate coinflips.
See, it just seems like a stupid misplacement of words that isn't really important. I don't see how it makes a difference if you flip two coins across the room and look at one, or if you flip one and then flip another. The second is independent from the first, it's still 50%

It's a stupid rule.
It's not a misplacement of words. The only trick is that your mind leaps ahead to what you THINK you know.

In anything - science or math or engineering or English literature or love or cooking - there are things you know and things you don't know. Knowing what you know is even more important than knowing what you don't know because what you don't know MAY cause a wrong result, but not knowing (i.e. not recognizing) what you do know means you can't act upon that information, which practically guarantees a wrong result. Learning to recognize and correctly interpret what you know, or at least what you can know if you can recognize it, is absolutely vital for success in anything.

In any endeavor, learning to recognize and correctly incorporate what you know is the basis for sound work. Everyone here should make absolutely sure he or she understands this problem AND understands why natural human inclination is wrong in this case. How many times in life do you look back and slap your forehead, saying "How can I have been so stupid? It was all right in front of me. I knew he couldn't be trusted. I knew that answer was wrong. I knew that wasn't going to work."
 

NewClassic_v1legacy

Bringer of Words
Jul 30, 2008
2,484
0
0
SeymourB post=18.73797.809725 said:
k, i'll stick around until i'm banned or whatever just to piss you dumb motherfuckers off.

now why the hell are you saying they mean everything in this problem. no disagreement there, but why are you bringing it up. nevermind i don't want to know you guys are retarded.

"this guy is right"
"NO UR WRONG HERES A LINK TO A SONG"
"no im right. here's a link explaining why"
"DONT CARE"
"w/e"
"GENDER DOESNT AFFECT THE PROBABILITY OMG UR WRONG"
"dude wtf im trying to go away and you keep talking to me"
"I WANT TO GET THE LAST WORD IN"
"fuck you"
"AGKHBILRHGLIEHW"
"that wasn't a word"
"FUCK YOU"
you guys are just fucking egging this shit on, trying to get a fucking point in or some shit.
I highlighted the important part of the rules for you, they are as follows:

Joe post=18.50824.348635 said:
Grammar and spelling. Everyone who moderates the boards is an editor. Bad spelling and improper grammar physically hurts us, precious. Respect yourself and others; take the time to check your spelling and how your post is worded. Also, one exclamation point or question mark is enough at the end of a sentence.

Flaming and trolling. Let's keep things civil, here. Responding to someone's post just to attack him is unacceptable.

Act like an adult, and I don't swing the banstick. We're intelligent, responsible people, all of us. We know how to treat one another, and we know how to disagree respectfully without things turning nasty. This is our lawn, we invite you to play here, but be polite and follow our rules or find somewhere else to hang.
Here's the deal. You disagree, we disagree, and we're done with it. That's how it could work, but instead, you've endeavored to berate us for posting just to get the last word in when you yourself are posting to get the last word in.

Here's the deal, you're making a bigger deal out of this than there really should be. How about we all drop it, and continue with the mathematical problem like this thread is really all about.

Fud post=18.73797.809286 said:
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?
The problem doesn't provide enough information to assess the situation. If both beagles are from the same mother, the chance is 33%, if they are from different mothers, it is 50%, if the question is calling for whether or not they're male, female, or both male, then the percentage is 33%.

Which specifically, isn't identifiable, therefore I voted with the option that had the most possible answers, which is 33%.
 

Saskwach

New member
Nov 4, 2007
2,321
0
0
Shivari post=18.73797.809797 said:
werepossum post=18.73797.809779 said:
But the probability of the set of both coin tosses follows a rigid structure. Knowing one coin's result changes the probability of the other coin's result.
But it's independent from the other one. It's a stupid trick.

Or this might be way over my head and I should just leave. I take it you learn these evil and useless tricks in later years.
They're not tricks: they're tests of whether you can determine from the information you're given specifically what kind of statistics problem you have on your hands. Real world stats problems won't kindly tell you what probability distribution you should use, for instance - poisson, normal, binomial, exponential, etc. Half of what you're taught in (good) probs and stats classes is what elements you should look for in any given problem to find the solution method before you find the answer. If, to return to probability distributions, you're told that you're looking at a continuous set of variables (as in the numbers are not discrete - there are no jumps in value, so, say, every whole number) you know that poisson and binomial distributions are immediately off the table.
What else are you told, though? Are we mapping population growth? Then it's exponential distribution you want. Now kindly start using the equations we've given you for exponential probability distributions.
My Year 12 Probs and Stats unit was practically made on these "trick" questions. You were given a written explanation of the problem, but not told what type of problem it was; if you couldn't figure that out then you didn't know the subject anyway, and didn't deserve the marks.

Edit: I see this post was already replied to. My bad.

Edit 2: You're all wrong; it's 33.333 recurring. So there.