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by ColinWright
2882 days ago
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I'd be interested to know what it is about my reply that makes you think this is a psychology puzzle. In particular, it seems to be people's psychology that prevents them from understanding the mathematics underneath. People seem to assume that if there are two choices then they must be equally likely. That's a psychological thing, although to be honest, I don't understand it. But the Monty Hall Problem as stated is about the probabilities, not on the psychology. Computing the probabilities is simple math, once you understand the situation. My explanation was to help the reader understand why the two choices given don't have equal probability. |
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If I chose a door before, then something happens that leads to only two doors being left, both those doors have the same probability so I could just choose the same door again.