Thankee kindly, Mr. Werepossum. Or Mrs. Werepossum. Or werepossum Werepossum.werepossum post=18.73797.812420 said:You - are the man. Or woman. Or rat. Whatever, that explanation was excellent.
Samirat is equating t to M and T to F (or vice versa, it doesn't matter) for the purposes of comparing the question at hand with the results of a traditional genetic Punnett square, and you are confusing the issue by bringing up the genetics of gender. Nothing relevant to this problem, or what Samirat is talking about, has anything to do with sperm and eggs.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812754 said:No, it's not irrelevant, because Tt and tT describe two different events, either sperm T and egg t OR sperm t and egg T. But that's not how the one female dog situation works--the dog being female can result from one and only one possible event--an X egg and an X sperm. An X egg and a Y sperm is a boy, and unless there's some weird genetic disease or the Holy Spirit involved and this is the Jesus Puppy, you can't get Y from an egg.
It is neither the correct nor the necessary deduction. I have the sinking suspicion that even if we KNEW it was in reference to the puppy in container '1', we could not change the answer to anything other than 33%, because order still isn't part of the question.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812766 said:Ahh--this is perfect for me to explain myself. I'm not arguing for eliminating D; I'm arguing for eliminating *one and only one* from these choices: D and A (edit).
I'm saying we have to deduce that the sex checker was saying "Yes!" in reference to *either* the beagle in the container labeled '1' OR the beagle in the container labeled '2'. Isn't that both the correct and the necessary deduction?
Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812787 said:You're excluding the point that "both are male" = 0.25, "both are female" = 0.25, and "one is female and one is male" = 0.5. Yes, the "distinct set of possibilities" contains only 3 entries, but those 3 entries do not have equal weights. This means that of those 3 possibilities, they are NOT "equally likely". When you remove the "both are female", the other two retain their relative weightings.Saskwach post=18.73797.812757 said:There are two puppies. Puppies are male or female, and occur in equal numbers. There's a random pair of puppies. That means there are three possibilities: both are male, both are female, or one is female and one is male. We find out that one is male. That means there are only two possibilities. The one we don't know about is male or it's female. Since both possibilities are equally likely, that means there's a 50% chance we've got two males and a 50% chance we've got one female and one male.
Oh, now I see what you're getting at. Very badly worded problem, either of us could have been right with the information given.kailsar post=18.73797.811168 said:You're right that the situation is exactly the same if you use coins. And if you flip a coin, and it's heads, then the probability that the other coin will be heads is 50%. But:orannis62 post=18.73797.811069 said:No, we are reading your explanations. Mathematically, you're right. Logically, you're not. To use the tired analogy of a coin toss, if you flip a coin twice, the the first flip has no bearing on the second. That is this exact situation, seriously, you could have replaced "Male puppy" with "Heads coin" in the original problem.
If someone flips two coins and keeps the result hidden from you, and you ask him if there's a 'heads', and he says yes, then the probability that they're both heads is one-third.
It's easiest if you try to emulate the problem as closely as possible. Don't think of it in terms of "reflipping" anything or "fixing" anything or whatever. Just list all the possibilities and then answer simple questions about them.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812140 said:That's my point--how are you 'ruling out' all the tails tails outcomes so there is always one head? Are you doing it by reflipping any tails tails outcome until you get at least one head? Or are you doing it by putting down one coin on the table Heads up? It makes a huge difference. You can't just say "Rule out all the tails tails outcomes, so that there is always at least one head" without telling me how you rule them out.
Dog1 Dog2 1+ Ms? 2+ Ms?
M M yes yes
M F yes no
F M yes no
F F no no
No. If you pick one dog up and it is female, then you pick up the other dog to check its sex.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812891 said:But I'm not doing that. I'm saying we have to eliminate *either* the "F/M" case *or* the "M/F" case (and that's an exclusive or) because the male dog is either Dog1 or Dog2.Alex_P post=18.73797.812881 said:You're incorrectly eliminating the "F/M" case by asking a different question ("Is Dog1 male?") instead.
Still going, huh? I thought maybe I'd wake up to find everyone agreeing that there were no dogs, or that the dogs had drowned or something. Oh well. Here's the thing. What you know is that the pair of dogs are in set 3. That is all you know. You do not know the order of the dogs. You are looking for a pair of dogs that is in set 4. What odds are you going to give me that the first pair you pick out is going to be two males?Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.813240 said:3. .75e50 (2b + 2c, right?)Alex_P post=18.73797.812937 said:3. Of all of the puppy groups, how many contain at least one male? (Number, not percentage.)
4. Of all of the puppy groups, how many contain exactly two males? (Number, not percentage.)
5. Of only the groups that contain at least one male, how many contain exactly two males? (Number, not percentage.)
4. .25e50 (same as 2c, right?)
5. .25e50 (why would this be different from 4 or 2c, if you're asking for numbers and not percentages? How could a group that contains two males NOT be of the groups that contain at least one male? Isn't containing at least one male a necessary condition for containing two males? Or is that the point of the question?)
No, again, you're missing the fact that either dog, which I'm going to call Dog 1 and Dog 2, could be male. If Dog 1 is male, there is a 50 percent chance either way that dog 2 could be male or female. But if the first dog the dog washer looked at was female, than the other dog has to be male, since the premise of the problem guarantees at least 1 male.Kukul post=18.73797.813468 said:The other beagle is irrelevant it could have been a crocodile or Cthulu aswell.
There is 50% chance that the other dog is male (if thats how dogs breed)
It would be 25% if both genders had to be male and both were unknown, thats why you fools were mistaken.
What kind of an argument is this? Are you saying that the problem differs significantly based on who's doing the checking? The method is the same. If the first dog is male, she doesn't check the other one, before telling you "yes." But if the first dog is female, she checks the other one, and, since she has to find it male, in the problem's premise, she calls and answers "Yes." So in the first case, the next dog could be either male or female, in the second, it is definitely a male female pair. Therefore, two male female pairs, one male male.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812898 said:Check the question--you're not actually checking the dogs, you're relying on Puppy Washing Man to check them, then answer the questions 'is at least one of them male' with a yes or no answer.
Correct.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.813240 said:2a. .25e50Alex_P post=18.73797.812937 said:I want to see where we diverge:
Assume I have 2.00e50 actual puppies -- not probabilistic puppies with Schrodinger's Nards, just a metric fuckton of actual puppies.
Half of the puppies are female and half are male. (There are no intersexed puppies.)
I group them into 1.00e50 pairs of puppies.
2. How many groups would you expect contain...
a. two females?
b. one female and one male?
c. two males?
3. Of all of the puppy groups, how many contain at least one male? (Number, not percentage.)
4. Of all of the puppy groups, how many contain exactly two males? (Number, not percentage.)
5. Of only the groups that contain at least one male, how many contain exactly two males? (Number, not percentage.)
2b. .50e50
2c. .25e50
3. .75e50 (2b + 2c, right?)
4. .25e50 (same as 2c, right?)
5. .25e50 (why would this be different from 4 or 2c, if you're asking for numbers and not percentages? How could a group that contains two males NOT be of the groups that contain at least one male? Isn't containing at least one male a necessary condition for containing two males? Or is that the point of the question?)
I see now. Thanks for that. Ok, well as I laid out, the reason is because of how the woman has been asked to check the dogs and then how we've been asked dto check the dogs. She wasn't asked "Is Jesse a male?" This is crucial because such a question would actually give us two pieces of information: the gender of one dog; and which dog we're referring to. It would make the gender of the other completely independent and thus 50/50.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.812787 said:That two out of the three possible outcomes is female AFTER we've figured out that one of the puppies is male--that's the premise I'm not accepting.Saskwach post=18.73797.812757 said:Two out of the three possible outcomes is female. The other is male - hence 1/3. Let's not talk about matrices, or definitions or applicability - instead, tell me where the logic is refutable. Where is this premise that you must accept?
As you said before, since this is math, isn't half the point knowing whether we got to the answer the right way? The only reason we care about that is for the sake of reproducibility. When you have two competing methods/models, that both accurately predict the outcome of a given scenario, the best way to find which one is right is to provide an example where one of them fails, and the other succeeds. Can you think of an example where our model fails? Up to that point, it is absolutely semantics; two ways of getting to the same place, reliably and speedily, and nothing but a pillow fight over "my way being better".Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.814363 said:My sticking point is that I don't accept that we don't change the numbers once one of the events goes from a probability to a certainty.
The reflip wouldn't be modelling a hasty gender reassignment, it just models the fact that we know that two tails cannot have happened, or we cannot have had two female dogs to start with, so if we get it, we reflip. If there were a way of making it so that two flipped coins turning up tails simply couldn't happen, then we could do that instead.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.814356 said:Because you can't change the sex of the puppies or pick a new set of puppies every time you get two females. So if we're using coins as a stand in for puppies, they have to obey the same rules as puppies.In the case of coins, I'm not sure why you think a reflip is inappropriate, in the situation of two tails.
Absolutely. The only thing that changes the probabilities throughout the whole exercise is that we find out that at least one of the two dogs is definitely a male.Everything changes once we know one of the events--which are independent--is no longer in the realm of probability, but has become a certainty.All right, relating to you problem with Alex_P. To solve this problem, you simply place the number of pairs with 2 males over the number of pairs with at least 1 male.
Out of 100: 25/75
The sample space of the problem are the 75 pairs that contain at least 1 male, this fraction represents the number of pairs of dogs out of that where the other dog is a male. You made the fractions yourself.
I misunderstood your earlier comment then. I thought we were all in agreement about the 33%, and the sticking point was how we get to that number (whether it be a recalculation of the odds, a reduction of the result set, whatever).Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.814455 said:Thing is, we're not getting to the same place. Let's say this is a bet on picking a pair of male puppies. Even money when we don't know either puppy's sex is 4-1 odds, right? I'm saying that once we know that one puppy is male, that even money goes down to 2-1 odds. Everyone else is saying that the odds only go down to 3-1 for even money, if I'm doing the math right.