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by jonath_laurent
1479 days ago
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I would argue that this Wikipedia article is misleading and that it confuses more than it clarifies when it comes to resolving the paradox. In particular, I am disputing the fact that "no proposed solution is widely accepted as definitive" (exact quote). Indeed, the switching argument (or at least the argument as it is presented in the Wikipedia article) makes a clear and precise mistake that I claim any trained mathematician will immediately agree on once pointed to it. This mistake is explained in the following comments:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31566226,
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31567251 and
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31569991. Once you have identified it, this mistake is all but subtle. It is not about infinite series or Bayesian reasoning. It does not require a 30 minutes rebuttal talk. It is simply about misusing the very definition of an expected value in a way that could be qualified as a typing error (see linked comments). This error can only go undetected because of the ambiguity of the English language. Most of the fancy mathematical discussions I've been reading are distractions. This paradox is about language and not about any deep mathematical fact of probability theory. |
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The issue in this case is that E[X - A] is not well-defined. The expected profit from switching is given by an infinite series whose positive and negative components are each of infinite total magnitude, thus yielding different sums when bracketed differently ("conditional convergence"; just a coincidence that the word "conditional" comes up here again).