Or more concisely: the question isn't "Is puppy #1 male?"; the question is "Is one of them male?", so possibility 3, "F M", is not eliminated. Only "M M" would make the other one also male, so the chance is 1/3.werepossum post=18.73797.811839 said:The things you know are that there are two pups, that at least one pup is male, and that the chances of any pup being male are 50% - you can make no other statements of knowledge. That eliminates only one possible distribution out of four, that both are female. Ergo there are three remaining possible distributions. Of those three remaining possible distributions, only one results in two males; thus the percentage of two males is 1 in 3 or, expressed as an integer percentage, 33%.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.811513 said:SNIP
So why doesn't the 'set' change like I described in comment #175
from:
Puppy 1/ Puppy 2
M M
M F
F M
F F
to:
Referred To Puppy/ Other Puppy
M M
M F
This is where you go wrong.
There's a difference between being told that a particular dog is a male, and being told that out of two dogs, at least one of them is a male. You are being told that in this set of two dogs, at least one is a male, so M/M, F/M, and M/F are all valid. You aren't being told that a particular dog is male, which would reduce the likelihoods to either F/M and M/M, or M/F and M/M. Ah! But surely we do know one of them in particular is a male - the one in his hand is a male. Yes, that's true, but which dog is in his hand? Dog A or Dog B? He could've picked either up, and our initial supposition that MM, MF, FM and FF were equally likely was based on a Dog A/Dog B basis.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.814529 said:But that's not what we know. That's something we've deduced from knowing that one puppy is male. My problem is that you can't just incorporate half a fact--one puppy being male has more repercussions for our knowledge than just "we cannot have had two female dogs to start with"kailsar post=18.73797.814482 said: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.
You say that the how he checked the dogs is irrelevant, because we can't know how he did it. But we can suppose that he at least picked one of the dogs up. The chance that this first dog was a male is two-thirds, since we know it could be F/M, M/F, or M/M, and in two of those cases, the first dog he picks up will be a male. A third of the time, it'll be a female, so he will necessarily have to check the second dog. If this is the case, we know that he found it to be a male, since if he had not, that would give us an invalid state (two female dogs). Now, in the two thirds of the time the first dog is male, what sex is the other dog? It doesn't matter if he checks or not, the chance of that dog being male is 50%. Why? Because the first dog has already satisfied the assertion that one of the dogs is male, and that assertion no longer affects the probability.EDIT: Sorry, now I get you--there's a difference between 'dog in your hand' and 'dog referred to when saying 'yes'. That's where you're getting stuck. Whichever order he checked them, if he picked them up, etc. is irrelevant because we can't know about that. What we *do* know is that when we ask him the question, he's referring to one of the dogs and removing all probability that the dog is female.Now what most of the 50%-ers have been saying is that you don't have three equally likely outcomes, you have two. The dog in your hand is male, the dog not in your hand is either male or female. So you have MM and MF, where the first letter denotes the dog in your hand, the second letter denotes the one that isn't. The problem is that these situations are not equally likely. Why are they not equally likely? Because the dog-bather chose a dog. He may have looked at both dogs, found a male and a female, and picked up the male. If, on the other hand, he had picked up a dog at random, not looked at the other, and the one he picked up was male, then there would be a 50% chance that the other is male.
It's subtle, but very meaningful, the difference between 'dog in your hand' 'dog checked first' 'dog checked second' and what I'm talking about, 'dog referred to when answering the question'.
You're specifically looking for a male pair of dogs, not a single male dog after knowing that the first is male.Geoffrey42 post=18.73797.814571 said: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.
Let's try: puppies are paired at the puppy farm randomly. It turns out that for this particular breed of dog, pairs of females always instantly kill one another. Therefore, the universe of possible puppy pairs only consists of MM and MF pairs. Due to the nature of the universe (this is not an assumption of the problem, just a statement about the nature of the universe when sample sizes are sufficiently high), there are twice as many MF as MM pairs. What are your break-even betting odds of getting a MM pair?
How does the above differ from the original question?
No; the main difference between the 1/2 crowd, and the 1/3 crowd, is their different interpretation of the question.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.814680 said:Maybe before you knew one of the puppies was male, but now that you know one is male, the inquiry has changed.Lukeje post=18.73797.814648 said:You're specifically looking for a male pair of dogs, not a single male dog after knowing that the first is male.
You are aware your test is based entirely on luck?Jimmydanger post=18.73797.814723 said:Ok to everyone who thinks that the answer is 50% I can prove to you that it is in fact 33%. Forget all this complicated math stuff that has been posted so far its correct but forget it. Take two coins. No not theoretical coins real coins in your hands. These represent the puppies. Heads is male tails is female.
Flip the coins.
ask yourself "is one of these coins heads?" AKA "Is one of the dogs male"
If one is heads then ask "Is the second coin heads as well" AKA "is the other dog male"
Do this at least 20 times recording the results the more flips the better. If you have time to write a post you have time to flip 2 coins 20 times. The results will prove who is right.
my results were 14 no 7 yes exactly 35%
Technically as the number of tosses approaches infinity luck stops mattering.Jimmydanger post=18.73797.814755 said:do the test yourself the more times you flip the more accurate your results if you do it 100 times luck stops mattering
What you've done there is found the probability that either puppy is a male not whether the remaining puppy is a male.The Admiral post=18.73797.814798 said:If you go with the perspective:
puppy 1/puppy 2
m/m
m/f
f/m
then you are left with a 33% chance of one of those combinations but one of the puppies has been identified leaving you with
puppy 1
m
m
f
or
puppy 2
m
f
m
in either case the probability of one being male is 66%.
He's found the probability if you pick a dog at random after knowing that at least one is male.Jimmydanger post=18.73797.814820 said:What you've done there is found the probability that either puppy is a male not whether the remaining puppy is a male.The Admiral post=18.73797.814798 said:If you go with the perspective:
puppy 1/puppy 2
m/m
m/f
f/m
then you are left with a 33% chance of one of those combinations but one of the puppies has been identified leaving you with
puppy 1
m
m
f
or
puppy 2
m
f
m
in either case the probability of one being male is 66%.
Edit: The probability that 1 of them is male is 100% I'm not sure what you found there.
Technically yes, but most people refuse to look through 8 pages of probability matrices in order to find the correct answer among all the other answers proclaiming to be the correct answer.Shivari post=18.73797.814915 said:Didn't we figure this out 8 pages ago?
if you are using the commutative property then m/f and f/m add together equaling 2M/F not 1m/f as in your example.The Admiral post=18.73797.814934 said:if puppy 1 has been identified then you can only have m/m or m/f
if puppy 2 has been identified then you can only have f/m or m/m
both cases make it 50% chance
If you make the square
m / m | m / f
f / m | f / f
since one is male f/f is omitted and f/m = m/f due to the commutative property. That leaves m/m or m/f(f/m) and thus 50%.