It is a fair coin flip, so the chance of Monday and Heads is 50% and the chance for Monday and Tails is 50%. Since on one tails flip she is awakened on two days then the chance of Tuesday and Tails is also 50%. Therefore, Beauty has a 33% chance of being awake on a heads — Jeremiah
That's not correct. Beauty knows that she is awake and that is relevant information.
P(Heads) = 1/2
P(Heads|Awake) = 1/3
Whether 1/2 or 1/3 is assigned depends on whether one interprets the experiment as being about a coin toss event (1/2) or an awakening event (1/3). — Andrew M
and in the case that it's tails it's only her bet on the last day that's accepted — Michael
Consider instead that if it was heads then she's woken on Monday and if it was tails then she's woken on Tuesday and Wednesday. What's the chance that she's woken on Monday? 50%. Therefore what's the chance that it was heads? 50%. — Michael
I don't understand this provision. — Srap Tasmaner
I hate to say there is no conundrum about this one. I've not read most of the posts past this point in the thread.So we have:
H: A, S
T: A, A
So since there are three possible awakenings and only one is when the coin comes up heads, then won't that mean she has a 33% chance of it being heads? — Jeremiah
Here's a variant that is structurally similar:
No sleeping theatrics.
Examiner tosses a fair coin, and then tosses another. If the first toss was tails, she asks Beauty her credence that the first toss came up heads; if the first toss was heads she only asks for Beauty's credence if the second toss was heads as well, otherwise the round is over.
Done this way, Beauty will know that when she was not asked the first toss was heads, but she can do nothing with that knowledge. She's not asked and the round is over. What matters is that she's always asked when it was tails and asked half the time when it was heads. So her credence that it was heads should be 1/3. — Srap Tasmaner
Yes, the Monday awakening is twice as likely as the Tuesday one. It doubles the weight of that awakening. So it adds up to 33% since there is a 50/50 shot on the heavier awakening, and a 0% shot on the Tuesday one.But one of those awakenings is twice as likely as each of the other two, which is why the halfer answer is correct. — Michael
Yes, the Monday awakening is twice as likely as the Tuesday one. It doubles the weight of that awakening. So it adds up to 33% since there is a 50/50 shot on the heavier awakening, and a 0% shot on the Tuesday one. — noAxioms
I say bet £1 on heads. — Michael
(and in the case that it's tails it's only her bet on the last day that's accepted). — Michael
↪Andrew M That is not new information, she knew she'd be awakened beforehand. New relevant and significance information to reallocating creditably would be if she was told what day it was on Monday. — Jeremiah
I prefer the Monty Hall problem. — tom
From the coin flip she has a 50% chance of being awakened on Tails and Tuesday, and a 50% chance of being awakened on Tails and Monday. Not 25% each as you suggested. — Jeremiah
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