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@justanothermanganerd—
The reason that so many mathematicians supposedly got the Monty Hall Problem wrong was that it was mis-stated (specifically in the column of Marilyn vos Savant which appeared in Parade). Initial probabilities and the rule used by Monty were omitted. But people who blithely use the principle of insufficient reason didn't recognize the importance of the first omission, and a large group of people guessed at Monty's rule without realizing that they were guessing.
What is always given is a sequence of events; what is often not given is why Monty selected that door; but the rule that he uses determines how Bayes' theorem can then be applied. It determines how it applies in the one-person game, and whether Bayes' theorem is useful to one of the contestants in a two-person game.part of the monty hall problem is that the host ALWAYS reveals a door not chosen by the contestant and without the prize behind it.
You can't transform your mistaken presumptions into truth by shouting that they are obvious. I've already noted how, if in the two-contestant case he uses a rule that also explains his choice in the one-contestant case, then the reasoning does work for one of the two contestants.this is why it OBVIOUSLY doesn't work with two contestants.
It's sad that people often think that they learned math (and other things) in high school but really didn't understand it then nor come to understand it later. (Often, the teachers and journalists who supposedly explained it were incompetent.)crazy how you're apparently reading advanced stats papers and shit but don't even know the monty hall problem which is high school maths.
The reason that so many mathematicians supposedly got the Monty Hall Problem wrong was that it was mis-stated (specifically in the column of Marilyn vos Savant which appeared in Parade). Initial probabilities and the rule used by Monty were omitted. But people who blithely use the principle of insufficient reason didn't recognize the importance of the first omission, and a large group of people guessed at Monty's rule without realizing that they were guessing.