Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.811307 said:
However, what if we don't count T/T because we put one coin Heads up and only flip the other coin? Then we can't just stop at pulling T/T out of the matrix. We ALSO have to pull out *either* H/T *or* T/H, and that's an exclusive 'or' there. If we leave both H/T and T/H in, then our matrix no longer reflects the reality that we're only flipping one coin. It *would* reflect the reality if we eliminated F/F because the rules were that we flip two coins and T/T is considered a reflip, but if the rules of the game are that one coin is placed Heads up before any flip, then you can't just stop at eliminating T/T--you also have to eliminate, like I said, one and only one of T/H or H/T.
The connection to the puppy question is that once Bath Giving Man says "Yes!" to the question "Is at least one a male?" that is the equivalent of changing the game from flipping two coins to flipping one and leaving one Heads up. The 33%/redistribute .25 is not accurate under the 'lay one down Heads up and flip one' rules, but only under the 'reflip any T/T result' rules.
And it's the Puppy Bathing Man, not the Puppy Sex Reassignment Surgery Man, so no reflipping! ;-D
Yes, I think I have it (funny how we each have the cure for the others' ills...)
The thing is we're NOT placing one head on the table: we're getting a shady dealer to look at both without showing us and then telling us if one or both are heads. These are different operations.
If we put a head on the table, that would be like throwing it away and saying "new toss - will this be heads?" (I was shocked to learn some people play this game at casinos.) After all, that's the very definition of independent events.
But, and this is unarguable, we are NOT doing this in the dog question. We're flipping both coins, getting this shady dealer, who, nonetheless, has a heart of gold, not a tongue of silver, clauses(!), to check both coins together and tell us not just if the
first coin came up a heads (in which case we'd throw that coin away and be back to 50/50 for the next), but rather whether one or other or both are heads. These coins are already flipped; they're heads or tails and we aren't flipping them again. All we know is that Coin 1 is a head or Coin 2 is a head, but we aren't sure which, and we aren't sure what the other is at all.
Probabilities!
T/H
T/T
H/T
H/H
If we're told coin 1 is a head then we get:
H/T
H/H
We may as well throw coin 1 away and get this:
T
H
So a 50% chance.
But, again, we're just not doing that. We're stating that coin 1, or coin 2, or both, are heads, but we aren't stating which:
H/T
T/H
H/H
In which case we can't throw away coin 1 because, in this case, if coin 1 were a head, then it actually does affect the likelihood of coin 2 being a head: coin 2 is not independent of coin 1. The important part, the really important part, is that the first coin - the one we're told to put face up in your example - doesn't actually have to be heads for the other to be heads, and thus the answer to still be "yes, we have at least one head."
The real lesson we should take from this thread, though, is: when you don't want to deal with probabilities you should ask a better question.