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by kgwgk
1035 days ago
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If I understand correctly what you said: If I tell you that one kid is male, you think that the probability that there is one male and one female is 2/3. If I tell you that one kid is female, you think that the probability that there is one male and one female is 2/3. (Right?) If I don't tell you anything - beyond the fact that I have two kids - what's the probability that there is one male and one female? |
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So, knowing no additional information, the chance of one male and one female is two-fourths, or one-half.
Knowing that there is at least one male (eliminating FF), or at least one female (eliminating MM), the probability of one male and one female is 2/3.
If you know the sex and birth order of one, you eliminate two possibilities, retaining the relative probabilities of the remaining ones as equal, so if you know the first is male, eliminating FM and FF, then the probability of one male and one female is 1/2 (and similarly, mutatis mutandis, with other sex and birth order combinations, which produce the same result eliminating different pairs of possibilities.)