[Archive!] Pure mathematics, physics, chemistry, etc.: brain-training problems not related to trade in any way - page 392

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Even without cheating, an experienced accountant's eye, for example in paragraphs 29-30 29-30 immediately says "I don't believe", or in item 35 we see that 4*7 = 22, which again indicates a false. Altogether counting only two-digit examples and estimating probability of the rest you get 35 points at once.
Monty Hall's paradox
It's considered worthwhile, but I think it's nonsense.
It's considered worthwhile, but I think it's nonsense
Delusion - intuitive or reasoning?
intuitively
If we don't change our choices, it turns out that we initially guess only one box out of three, because the presenter opens his box after we have chosen it.
If we always change our choice, it's equivalent to choosing one box that won't open, but the other two will definitely open - hence the statistical advantage - we win in two out of three cases.
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If we don't change our choices, it turns out that we initially guess only one box out of three, because the presenter opens his box after we have chosen it.
If we always change our choice, it's equivalent to choosing one box that won't open, but the other two will definitely open - hence the statistical advantage - we win in two cases out of three.
Two will still be opened 1,2 or 2,3 - the first will be opened to check if there is a prize.
no. Choosing one box that you definitely can't open is like choosing two boxes that you can open.
And if you choose one box to open (we can only open one ourselves), then the master will still open the empty one.
logic.