Mo0o
Lifer
- Jul 31, 2001
- 24,227
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Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Originally posted by: Mo0o
I'm not sure why you're getting hung up on that word. It is accurate because it implies you're not selecting a coin. The "random" aspect is there to make it clear the picker has not applied any kind of criteria into the selection of the coin
That isn't true at all though. The picker has a much higher chance of picking the trick coin than any of the real coins. Usually in these sort of puzzles random implies equal chance for any of the possible results.
What. On the initial pick itself the chance is 1/20. The only reason the chance of you having picked the trick coin has gone up is because you have flipped it 4 times and came up heads.
But the very first initial act of reaching into the jar and picking up a coin is not skewed.
Ever piece of new information you gather (flipping heads) increases the probability of you having accomplished something that had a fixed probability of 1/20. So there's two probabilities at work here.