That's what probability is. Any individual situation is an exclusive or from any other individual case. Therefore MM is exclusive from MF, and both are also exclusive from FM. This makes three separate possibilities. You can't rule out any of them with the exclusive or, since actually they are all exclusive from each other. Probability takes all the exclusive situations, and finds the likelihood that any particular one or group will occur.Cheeze_Pavilion post=18.73797.838877 said:No, you get two possible scenarios of two configurations:geizr post=18.73797.838752 said: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."Is at least one a male?" she asks him. "Yes!" she informs you with a smile.
M/? "The Puppy Washing Man picks up one puppy and looks at it and discovers it is male."
XOR
F/M "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"
You can't smush together two different, mutually exclusive scenarios each with two configurations into one, three configuration scenario.
In this problem, what are the chances that your first dog is male? We'll call them Sparky and Othello. What are the chances that Sparky is male? What are the chances that Othello is male?
Should be 66 percent, for each, right? If you disagree, what do you think it is? If I could draw a diagram, this would be easier.
All right, so take a circle. Section off 66 percent of the circle. This represents the probability that Sparky is male. Now, take another 66 percent of the circle, and inscribe it in as well, so it overlaps with Sparky's male chance. And the two dogs are both male only 33 percent of the time, and only 1 is male 66 percent of the time.