Comments

  • Cinderella Problem. Anyone understand it?

    This is a Veritasium video on the Cinderalla problem.
    It's known as the Sleeping Beauty Problem.
    I think it suggests that a fair coin flip can have odds other than 50/50
    No. It "suggests" that the conditional probability of an outcome depends on any information that is obtained about that outcome. For example, if I pick a random card the probability that it is the Ace of Spades is 1/52. If I tell you it is a black card, the conditional probability is 1/26. If I tell you it is an Ace, the conditional probability is 1/4.

    None of these answers changed anything. They evaluated different sets of information about the card. The issue in the Sleeping Beauty Problem is what, if any, information is gained? And two things seem confuse both the halfers and thirders described in the video:
    1. Both seem to think that SB being left asleep on Tuesday, if the coin landed on Heads, is not a result of the experiment. They think this because SB can't observe it. I'm sorry, but it is a result, just one that can only be observed from the outside. If you doubt this, ask yourself if anything changes, on the days she is awakened in the video, if she is awakened on Heads+Tuesday, but not asked the question.
    2. The memory wipe between Monday and Tuesday makes the observations SB can make on those two days independent to her, but not an outside observer.

    MY ASSERTION: The correct solution is that SB will participate in four equally-likely outcomes that are independent to her, but not to an outside observer, because of the memory wipe. One of these outcomes is eliminated due to the fact that she observes it. So the answer is 1/3.

    ONE PROOF BY DEMONSTRATION: There actually are four possible variations of the same experiment. She could be wakened always on Monday, and optionally on Tuesday; or optionally on Monday, and always on Tuesday. With either schedule, she could be wakened on the optional day after Heads, or after Tails; with this variation, she will be asked about the coin result where it is optional.

    Regardless of what you think the answer is, that answer applies to each of the four variations. So, use all four at the same time. Assign a different variation to each, and use the same coin flip for them all.

    On each day, three volunteers will be wakened. Two of these will be wakened both days, and one will be wakened on this day only. The question each addresses is, in essence, whether she is the "one wakening" volunteer. Yet none have any information to support the probability being different for any of the three. So the answer must be 1/3.

    This is true regardless of whether each was told what combination she was assigned, and regardless of whether they can discuss it with each other (as long as they don't share assignments). So it also must be true if the other three exist, or SB merely supposes it. Which is the original problem. Essentially, the "missing" volunteer represents the "missing" observation opportunity.

    +++++

    Sailor's Child problem
    The Sailor's Child problem, introduced by Radford M. Neal, is somewhat similar. It involves a sailor who regularly sails between ports. In one port there is a woman who wants to have a child with him, across the sea there is another woman who also wants to have a child with him. The sailor cannot decide if he will have one or two children, so he will leave it up to a coin toss. If Heads, he will have one child, and if Tails, two children. But if the coin lands on Heads, which woman would have his child? He would decide this by looking at The Sailor's Guide to Ports and the woman in the port that appears first would be the woman that he has a child with. You are his child. You do not have a copy of The Sailor's Guide to Ports. What is the probability that you are his only child, thus the coin landed on Heads (assume a fair coin)?

    This is actually not the quite same thing. To see that, imagine what the answer would be if you do have a copy of The Sailor's Guide to Ports.
    • If your port is the last one listed, you know that the coin landed on Tails. That is, Pr(Heads|Last)=0.
    • If your port is the first one listed, you have no information about the coin. So the conditional probability is the same as the unconditional probability, Pr(Heads|First)=1/2.

    But if you don't know what Q is, the answer must be between these two answers; that is, 1/2 can't be correct. So, say the fraction of the other entries that come after your port is Q, where 0<=Q<=1, then Pr(Heads|Q)=Q/(1+Q). Note that this agrees with the other two answers, and that it is 1/3 if Q=1/2.

    Since you have no information about Q, you can treat it as as a uniformly distributed random variable. As the number of entries grows large, Pr(Heads|you were born) approaches 1-ln(2) ~= 0.0307,
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    Pr(Heads & Day = D) = 1/2 * 1/N.Michael
    Fixed; I was in a hurry, and that didn't affect the answer. All the probabilities I gave were off by that factor of 1/2.

    That aside, using your above reasoning, in the normal problem the prior probability that she will be woken on Tuesday and the coin landed on Heads is 0
    No, the prior probability that she will be woken on Tuesday, and the coin landed Heads, is 1/4. The prior probability that she is awake and the coin landed Heads is 0. "Will be woken" and "is awake" are not the same events.

    So when she "rules out" Pr(Heads & Day = Tuesday)
    And for about the tenth time, "rules out" is not a valid expression. I only use it since you can't stop using it, and then only when I really mean a valid one. The conditional probability of event A, given event C, is defined to be:

      Pr(A|C) = Pr(A&C)/Pr(C).

    I gave the correct realization of this definition in my answer. The fact that it differs from yours, in "ruling out" certain probabilities, can only prove that one is wrong. Not which. The fact that mine is valid, and ours is not, proves which.

    It is valid, because it looks at what could have happened, not what could not. The prior probability of reaching an interview on any given day, after Tails is flipped, is twice that of Heads. Always. On any day in your experiment.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    It's not. You say:

    "If the coin landed on Heads, then an N-sided die is rolled, where N>=2. She is woken on day D1 - that is, D1 days after day 0 - where D1 is the result of this roll, and asked her credence. Then she is put back to sleep."
    Michael
    It's irrelevant (it refers to occurrences after she has answered). But I did intend to take that one out.

    I did adjust the second one to match what you said, so your next point is not only just as irrelevant, it is incorrect when you say I "put her back to sleep" after the second interview:
    In my example she isn't put back to sleep. The experiment just ends. The same with her second tails interview. So we have no idea how many days the experiment will last. It could be anywhere between 1 and N days.

    But it is also incorrect where you claim you identified when she is sent home (you didn't). Or the implication that the experiment's length makes any difference whatsoever. But since these are the only differences you could find, and they make no difference, I can easily correct them to match the version you now say you want. Which, by your standards, is different than what you said before:
    1. She is put to sleep on day 0.
    2. A coin is flipped.
    3. If the coin landed on Heads, then an N-sided die is rolled, where N>=2. She is woken on day D1 - that is, D1 days after day 0 - where D1 is the result of this roll, and asked her credence.Then she is sent home.
    4. If the coin landed Tails, then two N-sided dice are rolled. If they land on the same number, repeat the roll until they are different. She is woken on day D1 and day D2, and asked her credence. Then, on the first of these days, she is put back to sleep with amnesia. On the second, she is sent home.

    This is the exact procedure you asked for, except: (A) It lasts between 1 and N>=2 days, not between 1 and 14 days. And (B) the selection of the two random "TAILS" days in that period is uniform, instead of weighted toward the earlier days.

    On each day in the range 1 to N, the prior probability that she will be woken on that day AND the coin landed on Heads is 1/N. And the prior probability that she will be woken on that day AND the coin landed on Tails is 2/N.

    We can proceed two different ways from here. The first is easier, but relies on the statement "the probabilities are the same regardless of which day it is, so we can treat the day D as a known constant.:

    • Pr(Heads&Day=D) = (1/2)*(1/N) = 1/(2N).
      • This is the prior probability from above.
      • All events of the form (Heads&Day=d), where d is not equal to D, are "ruled out" because it is day D.
    • Pr(Tails&Day=D) = (1/2)*(2/N) = 1/N.
      • All events of the form (Tails&Day=d), where d is not equal to D, are "ruled out" because it is day D.
      • But I will reiterate that "ruled out" is not a definition that is ever used in probability theory. It is one you made up. What is done, is what follows next.
    • The conditional probability of event A, given that it is day D, is found by this definition:
      • Pr(A|C) = Pr(A&C)/Pr(C)
      • Pr(Heads|Day=D) = Pr(Heads&Day=D)/[Pr(Heads&Day=D)+Pr(Tails&Day=D)
      • Pr(Heads|Day=D) = (1/(2N))/(1/(2N)+1/N) = 1/3.
      • In other words, what is done is to only use the prior probabilities of events that are consistent with the condition. In this case, with a specific day.

    The more formal method is to use that calculation separately for each day d in the range [1,N], add them all up, and divide the result by N. It still gets 1/3.

    There is one unorthodox part in all this. The random variable D in the prior probabilities is different from the random variable d used by SB when she is awake. This is because D can take on two values in the overall experiment, but only one to SB when she is awake. So (D=1) and (D=1) are not independent events in the prior, while (d=1) and (d=2) are independent to SB when she is awake

    Finally, I'll point out that if N=2, this is the two-coin version you have ignored.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    I can't prove a negative.Michael
    Yet that is the basis of your argument. You even reiterate it here. And it is part of your circular argument, which you used this non sequitur to divert attention from:

    1. M's solution is right.
    2. J's solution gets a different answer, so it must be wrong.
    3. J's solution "rules out" an event.
    4. M's does not. In fact, it it says that event doesn't exist (the "negative" you claim).
    5. That must be the error, since there must be an error (see #2).

    If there is some prior probability that is ruled out when woken then tell me what it is.
    I have. You ignore it. But this is a fallacious argument. Claiming I did something different does not prove the way you handles the different thing is right and mine was wrong.

    If you can’t then I have every reason to accept that there isn’t one.
    Quite an ultimatum, from one who never answers questions and ignores answers he can't refute. Since you haven't proven why the event "Heads&Tuesday" doesn't exist - and in fact can't, by your ":can't prove a negative" assertion, I have every reason to accept that it does exist.

    +++++

    Here is a version of your latest procedure. The only non-cosmetic change is that I made it easier to determine the prior probabilities.The "prior probabilit[ies] that [are] ruled out" are easily identified. I just need you to agree that it is equivalent to your procedure first. IF YOU DON'T, I HAVE EVERY REASON TO ACCEPT THAT IT IS.

    1. She is put to sleep on day 0.
    2. A coin is flipped.
    3. If the coin landed on Heads, then an N-sided die is rolled, where N>=2. She is woken on day D1 - that is, D1 days after day 0 - where D1 is the result of this roll, and asked her credence.Then she is put back to sleep.
    4. If the coin landed Tails then two N-sided dice are rolled. If they land on the same number, repeat the roll until they are different.She is woken on day D1 and day D2, and sked her credence. On the first of these days, she is put back to sleep with amnesia.

    Notes on the changes; all but one are cosmetic only:
    • By numbering day 0, you allow numbering all days.
    • You left out the coin flip, but we all know where it has to go.
    • The singular of "dice" is "die."
    • Your tenses don't mesh with stating when the coin is flipped.
    • There is nothing special about 14. Any number works - it doesn't even have to be even - that allows two wakings.
    • Rolling two N-sided dice at the same time, rather than two N/2 dice sequentially, makes the distribution of wakings over the N days uniform rather than a complicated function. So it simplifies any calculations based on it, if needed.

    Whether the coin landed on Heads or Tails she can wake on any day between Day 1 and day N.

    Something is indeed is ruled out when she wakes. You just don't recognize how the sample space you described doesn't recognize it.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    When I said that the only things that matter are:

    1. She has either one or two interviews determined by a fair coin toss and
    2. She doesn’t know if she’s already had one

    I was referring to her just waking up, not being told any further information.
    Michael
    And the only point of mentioning new information, was to show that the information you ignore has meaning. Not to solve the problem or alter the problem. But you knew that.

    No prior probability is ruled out here when woken so your example isn't equivalent.Michael
    And again, you keep using circular logic. You deny that events with non-zero prior probability are "ruled out" in your solution. So you claim that my solution, which does "rule out," must be wrong. This is a fallacy; your presumption that you are right is your only defense. You have never argued for why you think they aren't events.

    So, lets try this variation of what you most recently proposed. The only changes are to make the conditions you require, as in that quote above, easier to describe with both words and probabilities:

    1. SB is put to sleep on day 0, and a coin is flipped.
    2. The counting of days is facilitated by a tear-away calendar that is posted on the door to her room at midnight. It starts at Day 1, and as the top page is torn off at midnight every day thereafter, the day numbers are increased by 1.
    3. If the coin landed Heads, then an N-sided die (N>=2) is rolled and placed on a shelf by the door.
    4. If the coin landed Tails, then two N-sided dice are rolled and placed on the shelf. (If they both land on the same number, the roll is repeated until they are different.)
    5. Over the next N days, if the calendar number matches a die number, she is woken and asked for her credence.
    Whether Heads or Tails, she can wake once or twice over the next N days. The prior probability of a waking is the same on every day (your method didn't make this true). And she will never know if it is the first waking, the second waking, or the only waking.

    Do you agree that this does the same things your latest experiment does (if N=14) with the unimportant exception that the prior probability distribution over the N days varies in your version?
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    I most certainly can. You just won't try to understand it. Or answer any question placed before you, if you don't want to accept the answer. So once again, just answer mine first and I'll answer yours.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    So tell me what prior probability is ruled out in my experiment above.Michael

    This is getting tiresome. The answer follows trivially from what I have said before - have you read it? But I will not continue to dangle on your string. I'll point it out after you tell me:

    1. Whether you agree that procedure I just described implements "The only things that matter are that she has either one or two interviews – determined by a fair coin toss – and that she doesn’t know if she’s already had one [or will have another]."
    2. If not, what "thing that matters" is not implemented.
    3. What her credence in Heads should be.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    The specific days she’s woken or kept asleep are irrelevant.Michael

    I agree, with a caveat. The specific details of whether she is woken at a specific point ("day") in the experiment do matter. You can test this in Elga's solution. If she is told that the current day is Tuesday, then she knows Pr(Heads) must decrease to 0. If she is told that it is not Tuesday, the Law of Total Probability actually requires it to go up. It goes from 1/3 to 1/2 in the Thirder soluton, and from 1/2 to 2/3 in the Halfer solution. This is quite relevant, even if you think it is wrong AND CAN PROVIDE A VALID REASON

    But it isn't the day name that matters, it is the details associated with that day name. And since these details are different on different "days," we can track them by naming the "days."

    Now, you could argue about why those details might matter; but so far you have refused to. You have just asserted they don't (in spite of evidence like I just presented). But naming them cannot affect the correct answer, no matter how those details affect it. SO THERE IS NO REASON TO NOT NAME THE "DAYS." And even the possibility that they might have an effect makes them relevant.

    In other words, you are proffering the red herring here. You are insisting that we must ignore a piece of potential information, because you think it has no affect. If so, there is no harm in including it.
    The only things that matter are that she has either one or two interviews – determined by a fair coin toss – and that she doesn’t know if she’s already had one. Everything else is a red herring.Michael

    I agree (well, if you add "or if she will have one later") about "only things." But the "red herring" you claim exists, is trying to utilize information that you say has no affect while refusing to address affects that are clearly present.

    But if you truly believe in this, then it should be easy to address this:
    1. She is put to sleep. A coin, call it C1, is tossed to determine if "she has either one or two interviews."
    2. But then a second coin is tossed, call it C2.
      1. Call the state of the coins at this moment S1.
      2. If either coin is showing Tails in S1, wake her with amnesia and interview her.
      3. If both are showing Heads, do SOMETHING ELSE.
      4. If she isn't asleep at this point, put her to sleep again.
    3. Turn coin C2 over to show its other side.
      1. Call the state of the coins at this moment S2.
      2. If either coin is showing Tails in S2, wake her with amnesia and interview her.
      3. If both are showing Heads, do SOMETHING ELSE.
      4. If she isn't asleep at this point, put her to sleep again.
    4. Wake her and send her home.

    This procedure creates what, in your words, are "the only things that matters." She has either one, or two, interviews and does not know if another will/did happen. The only thing that is different, is that your possible two interviews occur under different circumstances; one is mandatory, and one is optional. What we disagree about is whether the part that is missing - the non-interview when the option is not taken - matters.

    Here they occur under identical circumstances. That is, either steps 2.1 thru 2.4, or steps 3.1 thru 3.4. And those circumstances can be used to answer the question. I did "name" the details by calling them state S1 or S2, but since they are identical to SB she can call them state S.

    There are three possible combinations of the two coins in state S, and they are equally likely. Her credence in state S=(H,T) is 1/3.

    This has nothing to do with what may or may not get "ruled out" in a solution to your version of the experiment. That difference is the red herring in the "most frequent" presentation of the problem. This is a self-contained experiment with a trivial answer.

    But it's an answer you don't like. So you will either ignore it, or repeat the non sequitur that it includes the "ruling out of a 1/4 probability" that we are debating about above, which is circular logic.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    And her being woken a second time if the coin lands heads can't occur, which is why its prior probability is 0, not 14.Michael

    In your experiment as you listed it, she isn't put to sleep and isn't woken. Yet you keep describing it as being woken, probably because that language is used in the "most frequent version." I have not mentioned this, because I recognize the need to read what you write with an open mind.

    There aren't two days in my example.

    But the time period after the coin is flipped still exists, and the coin can be Heads during that time. AS I DESCRIBED, I wanted a name for that period. So I choose to call it "Tuesday" regardless of when it occurs.

    So we can label four distinct periods of consciousness for SB during your experiment, by fake-name day and coin result. Any such moment has a 1/4 prior probability to be any one of these. Including Heads+Tuesday.

    But this was the subject of some of my questions. Even with sleep, the time period I choose to call "Tuesday" still exists, and can still have "Heads", regardless of SB being awake for it. The important part is that she knows when it isn't happening.

    If you have any integrity at all, you'd discuss my questions. You won't. because you have no counter argument for them. I have debunked everything you have said.

    Your "version" with sleep.
    1. Sleeping Beauty is given a 10 minute sleep drug that induces amnesia.
    2. Twenty minutes after she is given it (so ten minutes after she wakens with amnesia) a bell sounds, and she is asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads.
    3. After answering, she is given the drug again.
    4. The coin is tossed.
    5. If the coin lands heads she is given a booster that extends the effect of the drug for thirty additional minutes.
    6. The same bell sounds twenty minutes after the dose in step 2. If she is awake when it rings, she is asked the same question.
    7. After answering, she is given the drug a third time.
    8. She wakens about the same time regardless of the coin, and is sent home.

    There are four situations where the sound of the bell could fall on SB's ears: (Ring #1, Heads), (Ring #1, Tails), (Ring #2, Heads), (Ring #3, Tails). Each has a prior probability of 1/2 to an outside observer who can remember both. But only 1/4 to to be the one that just fell on SB's ears, even if she can't hear it. If the bell rings and SB is asked a question, she knows that (Ring #2, Heads) is ruled out, and her confidence in Heads is 1/3.

    Your error, as it has always been, is considering (Ring #1, Tails) and (Ring #2, Tails) to be the same result. Because both happen if the coin lands on Tails. But the point is that don't happen at the same time, and this makes them different outcomes to SB since in here world there is only ever one ring at a time. Even if she is asleep.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    So after waking, and before new information is revealed, the prior probability that the coin landed heads and that she is being woken for a second time is 1/4?Michael
    You are trying really hard to not understand this, aren't you? Of course, all of this would become moot if you would openly discuss other people's ideas, instead of ignoring them while insisting that they discuss only yours. (See: intellectual dishonesty.)

    AT ANY TIME in an experiment, the prior probability for any event is based set of all possibilities that could occur, and how they could occur. Not what (or when) information is revealed. And not on how they can be observed.

    But a person's BELIEF in an event is based on what information is revealed to her after a result has been realized. And that can depend on how it is observed.

    The problem here, is that many experiments can be described by different sets of results. The roll of two dice can be described by 36 different combinations or 11 different sums. Neither is invalid, but only the 36 combinations allow for prior probabilities to be easily assigned.

    And that is important here, because you are insisting that a two-day collection of events (I'll call your two passes Monday and Tuesday since only the order matters to anything). You are calling Monday+Tails and Tuesday+Tails the same event. But to SB, who can only observe one at a time, they are distinct events that each have half the prior probability that you assign to the combination.

    And you not only call Monday+Heads and Tuesday+Heads the same event in the same way, you deny that Tuesday+Heads happens. It does. Even if (as in "the most frequent" version) SB can't observe it, she knows (A) that it can happen, (B) that it has a non-zero prior probability, and (C) that it is not what is happening if she is awake.

    But in this version:
    1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
    2. The coin is tossed
    3. If the coin lands heads then she is sent home
    4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home
    Michael

    She does observe it.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    It makes no sense to say that when she wakes there is then a prior probability that she’s “asleep” of 14 that is immediately ruled out.Michael

    That is the only thing that does make sense. You are completely ignoring that fact that the experiment that SB sees when she is awake, is not the experiment that she volunteered for. In fact, this is the mistake all halfers make, and they do it because they do not know how to model the difference so they claim the difference doesn't exist.

    1. The experiment she volunteered for involves the possibility of two wakings.
    2. The experiment she see involves exactly one waking.

    The reason it is hard to model, is that experiment #2 still has to account for the other possible waking. But it has to do so while accounting for the fact that it is not the current waking. I have proposed a way to implement the actual SB problem (not the "most frequent" one that Elga used to account for the other waking) that removes this difference, And that is why you ignore it. Your argument about "no prior=1/4 to rule out" is explicitly saying you do not recognize the difference.

    Now, I can see why some would say we should agree to disagree on this issue. But to make that agreement, you have to at least make an effort to say what you disagree with, and "it can't use the solution I choose, and doesn't get the answer I want" is not such an effort. I have told you why I think all of your arguments are wrong. You display intellectual dishonesty by refusing to address what you think could be wrong with mine. It pretty much implies you can't find anything. I don't mean to be so blunt, but you can easily disprove this by making such an effort.

    I can set out an even simpler version of the experiment with this in mind:

    1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia
    2. She is asked her credence that a coin has been tossed
    Michael

    Um, no. You are asking if it has occurred when you know it hasn't, while correct implementation has to refer to the flip whenever it might occur.

    The prior probability that step 2 will happen is 1 and the prior probability that step 4B will happen is 12Michael
    Again, no."Prior" refers to before information revealed, not to before that information is "established." You do not help your argument by ignoring how probability theory works.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    So when is this alleged P(X) = 1/4 established if not before the experiment starts? It cannot be when she is asked her credence as you’ve said that in being asked her credence this prior is reduced to 0.Michael

    If you have so little understanding of probability theory, you should not be trying to explain it to those who do. The (somewhat simplified) basics are:

    1. A probability experiment is any set of actions that has multiple possible, but unpredictable, results.
    2. An outcome is a measurable result.
    3. A sample space is any set of outcomes that:
      • Are all distinct.
      • Include all possibilities.
    4. Each outcome in the sample space is assigned a probability value such that:
      • Each probability is greater than or equal to zero.
      • The sum of the probabilities for the entire sample space is 1.
    5. Sets of outcomes are called events.
      • The probability of an event is the sum of the probabilities in it.
    6. These can also be called "prior" probabilities.
      • This has absolutely nothing to do with when the probabilities are "established."
      • It refers to before any information about an outcome is revealed.
    7. The companion to a prior probability is a posterior probability. It is sometimes called a conditional probability.
      • It does require timing, but not directly.
      • Specifically, it refers to a time after the result has been determined, and some information about that result has been revealed.
      • I said it was not directly related to timing because the result can be hypothetical. As in "If I roll a die, and the result is odd, the conditional probability that it is a 3 is 1/3."

    When looking at your SB experiment as a whole, there are only two distinct outcomes. The sample space is {Heads,Tails}. We know that both (A or B) and (C or D) will occur, so this distinction does not qualify as different results.

    But when looking at it from SB's awakened state, four are necessary:
    • A and B belong to distinct outcomes, because "Heads" and "Tails" are distinct results. SB knows that only one is (or could be) true. Please note that it does not matter that SB does not see this result, since she knows of the distinction and that only one can apply to her at the moment.
    • B and D are distinct outcomes by the same logic. The measure that distinguishes them is "first possible interview" and "second possible interview." Or "Monday" and "Tuesday" in Elga's solution (not the experiment he described). However you name this quality, SB knows for a fact that one value applies, and the other doesn't.
      • It does not matter if SB is awakened in step 3, or not. The same quality that distinguishes B from D also distinguishes A from C.
      So the sample space is {A,B,C,D}. The prior probabilities, for an awakened SB, are 1/4 for each. The "new information" she receives is that C is ruled out. The posterior probability for A, the only outcome where the coin is Heads, is 1/3.

    But all of this is unnecessary in my scenario. The sample space for either waking is {HH,HT,TH,TT}. Being awake rules out HH.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    Prior probabilities are established before the experiment starts, so there is no “current waking”.Michael

    There is no theory of when prior probabilities are established. But if there were, it would be fom the start, not before the start. This is the same principle that allows you to ask for the credence of an occurrence that hasn't happened yet. Any time parameter you need has to extend over the entire experiment, so it sees the future possibilities and can distinguish them.

    But this is the entire controversy behind the Sleeping Beauty Problem. One that I have shown can be trivially removed. And that is why you ignore it.

    Now, I have addressed everything you have tried. Answer my questions.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    We’re talking about prior probabilities, i.e the probabilities as established when the experiment starts.Michael

    Which doesn't change the fact that A can be distinguished from B.

    The prior probability that step 1 will happen is 1.Michael

    And the prior probability that the current waking, is a step-1 waking, is 1/2. The prior probability that this is an "A" waking is 1/4. Same for B, C (yes, she is wakened in C in your system), and D. EACH IS A DISTINCT OCCURRENCE IN YOUR SYSTEM and so has a 1/4 prior [probability.

    And guess what? If she is asked for a credence, that 1/4 prior probability for C is "ruled out."

    But you don't agree with this because you refuse to recognize the difference between B and D, as well as A and C (which you deny).

    And guess what else? My experiment bypasses all these issues. Which is why you won't discuss it.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    I they don’t. She’s being asked here credence in the outcome of step 3.Michael

    You they do. In step 1, she is asked for her credence in the outcome of step 2, not step 3 (which also asks about it). So she must be able to distinguish between its two possible results when she is in step 1. You can't have it both ways; either the credence question is ambiguous in step 1 becasue the coin hasn't been flipped, or there are two recognizable future results that also distinguish A and B.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    what "subjective probability" could possibly be is also kinda what the whole puzzle is about. I just thought we could pause and consider the foundations.Srap Tasmaner

    I roll two six sided dice. I tell you the resulting sum is an odd number. What is your "credence"="subjective probability" that the dice landed on a 3 and a 4? Is it 2/36, or 2/18 (there are two ways they can land on 3 and 4)?

    This is pertinent to your question if one thinks the answer to the SB problem is 1/2, solely because a fair coin toss has that probability. In that interpretation, the answer here is 2/36.

    The puzzle is "about" whether SB receives "new information," similar to "the sum is odd," when she is awake. Halfers say she doesn't, and Thirders say she does. What you choose to call the probability has no relevance. In my opinion, arguments based on what you call it are used because they can't defend their usage of "new information or not," and they know that their counterpart cannot defend such a definition.

    She receives new information. The reason some think otherwise is because they think "you sleep through the outcome" means "the outcome doesn't occur." There are four equally-likely experiment states that can arise that are distinct from each other. One of them means the subject is asleep (or not asked for credence, same thing), but it is a state nonetheless. If she is awake, she knows that she is in one of three.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    No they don’t. Your “A or B” isn’t two separate things but one thing with prior probability 1. C and D each have a prior probability of 1/2; C happens if the coin lands heads and D happens if the coin lands tails, and the prior probability that a coin will land heads is 1/2.Michael

    1. Your question "what is your credence the coin will/did land on Heads" is asking SB to distinguish between the cases where your coin will/did land on Heads, and will/did land on Tails. So cases A and B, which depend on the same distinction, must be distinct outcomes to SB. Even if the coin isn't flipped yet, this is a part of your experiment that you insist others must recognize. So please don't be disingenuous and try to deny it again.
    2. (A or B) is indeed certain to happen in the experiment. But since it is possible that SB is in the part labeled D, and part D is not in (A or B), the probability that she is in (A or B) has to be less than one. Do I need to provide a lecture on what probability means? Or are you ready to at least pretend to have an open mind?

    But this can all be clarified, by considering my questions. I have little "credence" that you will, because you can't accept those answers.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    I’m not asking about your shopping example.Michael
    But I am.

    I’m asking about this example:

    1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia and (A or B) asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
    2. The coin is tossed
    3. If the coin lands heads (C) then she is sent home
    4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, (D) asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home

    And the reason for the shopping example is pointing out that the four parts that I highlighted and labeled A, B, C, and D each have a prior of 1/4. And that what does or does not happen in C cannot change SB's credence in A, B, or D. All that matters is that when she knows she is in A, B, or D, she can "rule out" C. You are treating C as if it it isn't a point in the experiment, and it is.

    But you would have to address my questions to discuss this, and any truthful answer to them would discredit all you have argued. So you continue to ignore them, and reply only with this same non sequitur.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    Which is what?Michael

    That 1/4 chance that she would have been taken shopping.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    In your experiment the prior probability P(HH) = 1/4 becomes P(HH) = 0 when she’s asked her credence. But there is no prior P(X) = 1/4 that becomes P(X) = 0 when she’s asked her credence in my simplified form of the experiment.

    Hence your experiment is not equivalent and your solution doesn’t apply.
    Michael
    Tell me if you remember reading this before: In any experiment, measures of probability define a solution, not the experiment itself. The more you repeat this non sequitur (that your preferred solution can't be applied to my version of the experiment), the more obvious it becomes that you recognize that my experiment is correct.

    BUT, Q4 thru Q6 show that there is a "prior P(X) = 1/4 that becomes P(X) = 0 when she’s asked her credence" in your experiment. There is a possibility that she can rule out, and it DOES NOT MATTER whether she would be awake, or asked anything, in that possibility. All that matters is that she knows it is not the current case.

    Now, we could discuss all this if you would reply with anything except this same, tired non sequitur. Q1 thru Q3 are an easy start. But they don't involve mentioning prior probabilities.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    The prior P(Heads & Second Time) = 0 as established by the rules of the experiment. She will never be asked a second time if the coin lands heads. So there's nothing for her to later rule out when she's asked her credence.Michael

    She cannot use ""First Time" and "Second Time" in her solution at all, except in the context of the Law of Total Probability. Because she cannot have the slightest clue which "time" (and you don't define if "second time" means the second possible waking, or the second actual waking) it is. So she can "rule out" this case as part of this Law's application.

    The entire point of my suggested implementation is that "First Time" and "Second Time" look exactly the same. So the "prior" means the circumstances that govern "This Time," not "How this time relates to the other possible time."

    But you still ignore that the details used anybody's solution do not establish whether the implementation of the problem is correct. They can only establish whether a solution is. Your argument here is a non sequitur. The experiment does not require the subject to distinguish between which "time" it is; and in fact, it prevents isolating such a difference.

    Let me repeat "the rules of the experiment." From Elga's 2000 paper titled "Self-locating belief and the Sleeping Beauty problem" :
    Some researchers are going to put you to sleep. During the two days that your sleep will last, they will briefly wake you up either once or twice, depending on the toss of a fair coin (Heads: once; Tails: twice). After each waking, they will put you to back to sleep with a drug that makes you forget that waking. When you are first awakened, to what degree ought you believe that the outcome of the coin toss is Heads?
    Q1: Do you agree, or disagree, that the procedure I have outlined (with two coins, turning coin C2 over, but asking only for credence in coin C1) correctly implements this?

    Q2: Do you agree, or disagree, that the subject can be wakened, and asked for this credence, during the "second time" the waking+interviewing process could occur?

    Q3: Do you agree, or disagree, that the subject's answer (when asked) can be based solely on the state of the coins between time A when were examined to see if she should be wakened, and time B when/if she is subsequently wakened and interviewed?

    And you also ignored this:
    1. Shopping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
    2. The coin is tossed
    3. If the coin lands heads then she is given amnesia and taken shopping.
    4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home.
    JeffJo

    Q4: Do you agree, or disagree, that she can have a credence in Heads while shopping in step 3 of this variation of what you presented?

    Q5: And that she even can be asked for it without affecting her credences at other times?

    Q6: And that those credences can't be affected by whether they lied to her about step 3?
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    No it's not. She doesn't know that she's being asked a second time. She can't rule out heads.Michael

    Yes, it is. The Law of Total Probability says that

    Pr(Heads) = Pr(Heads&First Time) + Pr(Heads&Second Time)
    But "not ruing out" has not significance." Do this instead:

    1. Shopping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
    2. The coin is tossed
    3. If the coin lands heads then she is given amnesia and taken shopping.
    4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home.

    If Shopping Beauty is taken shopping, she knows that Pr(Heads)=0, even tho she isn't asked.If she is asked for a credence, she know that one of four possibilities is ruled out.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    She’s asked once in step 1 and then, optionally, again in step 4.Michael

    Okay, I missed that.
    No prior probability is ruled out when asked.Michael

    When she is asked the second time, the "prior probability" of heads is ruled out.

    That is what is wrong with your solution. You disagree with this criticism, but that does not invalidate these steps. In fact, nothing about anybody's solution invalidates anybody's set of steps.

    But you have not addressed my steps, or my solution. You have only repeated your solution. A solution I claim is invalid.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    OK, I understand your argument now,Michael
    No, you seem to understand the process finally, but your counterargument completely misses the point of the argument.

    Specifically, you are saying that by not applying probability theory as you do, in the same way you do, that I am not implementing the problem correctly. I am saying - and nothing you have said challenges this - that:

    1. I have implemented the original problem (not the variation of it that Elga solved) exactly.
      • I may have added a detail (coin C2), but that is how the specifics of the original problem (one or two wakings) is managed.
      • You (well, Elga) are adding a similar detail with Monday/Tuesday schedule. It also adds a detail, and is correct. But it obfuscates the solution instead of clarifying it.
    2. Mine has a trivial solution that establishes what the answer to any correct implementation of the problem is.
    3. So any solution that does not get that answer, to a correct implementation, is wrong.

    in your experiment the prior probability P(HH) = 1/4 is ruled out when wokenMichael

    Which is the entire point. You refuse to recognize that something must be "ruled out" due to the fact that your SB cannot be awake, after Heads, on Tuesday. The reason you do this is because the probability space that governs the situation on your Monday is different than that which governs Tuesday, and you disagree with how a joint probability space is calculated by Thirders.

    My entire point is to create a single probability space that applies, unambiguously, to any waking.
    1. Sleeping Beauty is given amnesia and asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads
    2. The coin is tossed
    3. If the coin lands heads then she is sent home
    4. If the coin lands tails then she is given amnesia, asked her credence that the coin will or did land heads, and sent home
    Michael
    This does not implement the original problem. She is wakened, and asked, zero tomes or one time.

    From Elga:
    The Sleeping Beauty problem:
    Some researchers are going to put you to sleep. During the two days that your sleep will last, they will briefly wake you up either once or twice, depending on the toss of a fair coin (Heads: once; Tails: twice). After each waking, they will put you to back to sleep with a drug that makes you forget that waking. When you are first awakened, to what degree ought you believe that the outcome of the coin toss is
    Heads?
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    So if the coin combination is HH then the participant will be asked their credence during the second pass? If so then you are wrong when you said "she also knows that the fact that she is awake eliminates (H,H) as a possibility."Michael

    No. Please pay attention to the highlighted texts.

    My implementation of the SB problem, the one I have been describing, is:

    But the difference Elga introduced was unnecessary. So don't do it; do this instead:

    Tell SB all the details listed here.
    Put SB to sleep.
    Flip two coins. Call them C1 and C2.
    Procedure start:
    If both coins are showing Heads, skip to Procedure End.
    Wake SB.
    Ask SB "to what degree do you believe that coin C1 is currently showing Heads?"
    After she answers, put her back to sleep with amnesia.
    Procedure End.
    Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side.
    Repeat the procedure.
    Wake SB to end the experiment.
    JeffJo
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    What matters is the probability that you will be asked for your credence at least once during the experiment.Michael
    0
    What matters is not the question, but that you are awake for an interview. And in my implementation, you are. After careful double-checking I found that you not only linked to the wrong posting, you ignored the part that said:
    Now, let the "further details" be that, if this is the first pass thru experiment, the exact same procedure will be repeated. Otherwise, the experiment is ended. Whether or not you were asked the question once before is irrelevant, since you have no memory of it. The arrangement of the two coins can be correlated to the arrangement in the first pass, or not, for the same reason.JeffJo
    I did forget to say that coin C2 is turned over, but that was said before. What I outlined in 3 posts above is identical to the SB problem. What I said in that post you dissected applies to one pass only, and the intent was to have two passes where, if there was no question in the first, there would be in the second.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    The lab assistant only asks your credence if the coin combination isn't HH.Michael

    And in the original, on Tuesday after Heads, you are also not asked for a credence. The only difference is that in this subset of my implementation, you started out awake but forget the occurrence. Oh, yeah, it had only one possible waking, so it was not the full SB problem.

    The point of extracting this from the full procedure was (A) the probability can be calculated based on the state of the current pass, and (B) only asking a question is important, not waking or sleeping.

    My implementation of the SB problem, the one I have been describing, is:
    But the difference Elga introduced was unnecessary. So don't do it; do this instead:

    Tell SB all the details listed here.
    Put SB to sleep.
    Flip two coins. Call them C1 and C2.
    Procedure start:
    If both coins are showing Heads, skip to Procedure End.
    Wake SB.
    Ask SB "to what degree do you believe that coin C1 is currently showing Heads?"
    After she answers, put her back to sleep with amnesia.
    Procedure End.
    Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side.
    Repeat the procedure.
    Wake SB to end the experiment.


    When SB is awake, she knows that she is in the middle of the procedure listed in steps 4 thru 9. Regardless of which pass thru these steps it is, she knows that in step 5 of this pass, there were four equally-likely combinations for what (C1,C2) were showing: {(H,H),(H,T),(T,H),(T,T)}. This is the "prior" sample space.
    JeffJo

    What you were looking at was one pass thru step 4 to 9.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    Probability=1 means "is certain." You said the probability of being asked was 1. That means certain. The subject in my implementation is always asked.

    "Prior probability" means "prior to information being given," so "prior probability...if Heads" is vacuous.

    I have no idea what you mean by "my example." My implementation is an exact version of your problem #1. I notice that you don't claim otherwise, you just try to say that #2 is different and I implemented #2. #3 is closer, and it is equivalent to #1.

    My explanation of how your additional constraints turned #2 into #3 is trivially true. As is how #3 is equivalent to #1.

    What credence is asked for does not affect, in any way, how the events themselves might occur. You are arguing with non sequiturs.

    All you have identified is how my solution differs from yours, not how my implementation of the problem differs from the actual problem. This is because it is trivially obvious that it does not. But you can't attack my solution, which is also trivially correct, so you attack the implementation.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    What matters is that in the Sleeping Beauty problem the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once is 1 and the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once if heads is 1Michael

    What has no significance to the SB problem, is what might be different if event X, or event Y, happens WHEN BOTH ARE CERTAIN TO HAPPEN.

    • X = The prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once, equal to 1.
    • Y = The prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once if heads, also equal to 1.

    Now, you are either a troll, very confused, or expressing yourself poorly. But if you won't consider that I might be right (as I keep assuming about you, until I actually find something wrong) there is no way to discuss anything with you.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    Neither participant knows if they are A or B.Michael
    I'm going to ignore the fact that neither A nor B is woken twice, so this isn't the SB problem. What you seem to mean is that the subject is woken once as A if Heads, and once each as A and as B if tails.

    Then you have created a third problem that is the equivalent of #1. Literally, it just adds a certain detail about names that is significant in #2 when they apply to different people, but makes it identical to #1 when it is the same person that can have either name. And an event it uses to choose the name - Heads or Tails - is already mentioned in the problems:

    1. A is woken once if Heads, twice if Tails.
    2. A is woken once if Heads, A and B once each if Tails.
    3. SB if woken once in room 100A if Heads, or once each in of the rooms 100A and 100B if tails.

    My version is indeed equivalent to both #1 and #3. It is not equivalent to #2 if A and B are different people, which was not given in its definition. In the special case where that is specified, all three are the same problem.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    These are two different problems:

    1. A is woken once if heads, twice if tails
    2. A is woken once if heads, A and B once each if tails
    Michael
    Yes they are.

    #1 has two subjects, and #2 has two.

    In #1, the only subject knows she will be wakened, just not how many times. Her credence in Heads is what we are asked about. Since both Heads and Tails are possible when she is awake, 0<Pr(Heads|Awake)<1.

    In #2, A knows she will be wakened and that the coin is irrelevant. So Pr(Heads|Awake)=Pr(Heads)=1/2. B knows that she will only be wakened if Heads. So Pr(Heads/Awake)=1.

    In my version, there is one subject who knows she will be wakened, just not how many times. Please, without referring to how you you would solve the problem once it is established, how is this different than #1? And how does the presence of B in #3 make it like mine?
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    In the original problem the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once is 1 and the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once if heads is 1, which is why the answer is 1/2 and why your example isn't comparable.Michael
    So now it isn't that I never asked about two coins ("You toss two coins and don’t ask them their credence if both land heads. That’s what makes your experiment equivalent to my second example where B isn’t asked if heads.")?

    Do I need to explain "my version" to you again? You now say it is different because:

    1. In the original problem the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once is 1 ...
      • In mine, the prior probability of being asked ones credence (that coin C1 is showing Heads) at least once is also 1.
    2. ... and the prior probability of being asked one's credence at least once if heads is 1 ...
      • In mine, the prior (?) probability of being asked one's credence at least once if Heads is also 1
      • But this doesn't appear to be a prior probability. That seems to be what "if Heads" means.
    So you are still describing how it is the same problem, while claiming that it is different.

    ... which is why the answer is 1/2 and why your example isn't comparable.
    Non sequitur.

    Please, show me how
    • The existence of two credence=1 events...
    • ... which, while the facts that they are certain are valid, do exist as an issue in the problem,

    ... produce the conclusion "the answer is 1/2."

    Do you want to try again? But do try to realize that probabilities used within a solution cannot affect whether the problems are the same. They can only affect the solutions, and credence=1 events do not do that.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    I do not ask anybody (for) their credence if both coins landed on Heads. — JeffJo

    Exactly. It is precisely because the prior probability of being asked at least once is 3/4 that the probability that the first coin landed heads is 1/3.
    Michael

    The original problem is about one coin, not two. Asking about two would make it a different problem. Asking about one is what makes it the same problem.

    But yes, it is indeed true that the prior probability of 3/4 is what makes the answer 1/3. You identified the wrong event for that prior probability (she is always asked), but it is the fact that this same prior probability applies to any waking, and not different prior probabilities depending on whether the subject is wakened on Monday or Tuesday, that makes it usable in a valid solution.

    Thank you for stating, in your own words, why this is so.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    You toss two coins and don’t ask them their credence if both land heads. That’s what makes your experiment equivalent to my second example where B isn’t asked if heads.Michael

    I do not ask anybody (for) their credence if both coins landed on Heads. I don't ask anybody about coin C2 at all, although it has to be taken into account.

    I ask for a credence in whether coin C1 is currently showing Heads. And the way the problem is set up, that is always the same event where coin C1 landed on Heads. Maybe you do not realize that coin C1 is the coin in the problem? And coin C2 is not?

    C2 is just the coin that controls ordering. Since amnesia makes ordering irrelevant to the single subject, what coin C2 is showing cannot affect the answer.

    That’s what makes your experiment equivalent to my second example where B isn’t asked if heads.Michael
    There is no B anywhere, as far as I can tell. You don't seem to want to explain the important details, like whether B is a person, a person in a different situation, or (as it seems here) if B is an event that is not a part of the experiment.

    AGAIN: I use a single subject. That subject is always wakened, but may be wakened twice. That subject is always asked "if heads" about the only coin that the original problem is concerned with, (It's even possible we could pose the question while she sleeps, but we shouldn't expect an answer.) When she can answer, she knows that there are three equally likely combinations for what the two coins are showing, and in only one is coin C1 showing Heads.

    This is not difficult. But you do need to stop trying to contrive a situation where it is wrong. So far, you have not even described a situation that applies.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    We have two different experiments:

    1. A is woken once if heads, twice if tails
    2. A is woken once if heads, A and B once each if tails

    Your version of the experiment is comparable to the second experiment, not the first.
    Michael

    Um, no.

    In "my experiment" I will literally and explicitly wake the single subject once if coin C1 lands on Heads, and twice if it lands on Tails. And there literally and explicitly is no second subject. So it is an exact implementation of 1, not 2.

    What you are doing here, is confusing the change in the details that determine how this single subject will be awakened, with her being a different subject. You name the different subjects "subject A" and "subject B." Well, the same thing can be done with Elga's ("the most frequent") implementation:

      3. Wake subject C once on Monday if Heads, or wake subjects C and D once each (on Monday and then Tuesday, respectively) if tails.

    And the reason that neither 2, nor 3, fits the intended problem is that the subject has to know she will be wakened, but not remember whether it happens one or two times. So that she is the same person, but does not know if she is in "world" (I don't like this word here, but it is how philosophers approach the problem) A, B, C or D.

    AGAIN:

    The controversy created by Elga's ("the most frequent") implementation, of the same problem that I implement, is this:
    • The incarnation of the single subject does not know if she is in world C or D.
    • This prevents her from defining a sample space that applies to just her world.
    • So she has to combine them into a single world
    • Halfers do it by saying they are the same world as the world that contains both, so the single probability space that applies to the combination applies to each individually.
    • Thirders do it by saying they are separate worlds, requiring a joint probability space and an assessment of which world she might be in.

    And the way my implementation solves this is by creating a simple probability space that applies to just world A, or to just world B, so it no longer matters which world the subject is in.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    So we have two different versions of the experiment:Michael

    I'm not quite sure why you quoted me in this, as the two version you described do not relate to anything I've said.

    To reiterate what I have said, let me start with a different experiment:

      You volunteer for an experiment. It starts with you seated at a table in a closed room, where these details are explained to you:
    1. Two coins will be arranged randomly out of your sight. By this I mean that the faces showing on (C1,C2) are equally likely to be any of these four combinations: HH, HT, TH, and TT.
    2. Once the combination is set, A light will be turned on.
    3. At the same time, a computer will examine the coins to determine if both are showing Heads. If so, it releases a sleep gas into the room that will render you unconscious within 10 seconds, wiping your memory of the past hour. Your sleeping body will be moved to a recovery room where you will be wakened and given further details as explained below.
    4. But if either coin is showing tails, a lab assistant will come into the room and ask you a probability question. After answering it, the same gas will be released, your sleeping body will be moved the same way, and you will be given the same "further details."
    So you sit in the room for a minute, the light comes on, and you wait ten seconds. A lab assistant comes in (so you weren't gassed, yet) and asks you "What is the probability that coin C1 is showing Heads?

    The answer to this question is unambiguously 1/3. Even tho you never saw the coins, you have unambiguous knowledge of the possibilities for what the combinations could be.

    Now, let the "further details" be that, if this is the first pass thru experiment, the exact same procedure will be repeated. Otherwise, the experiment is ended. Whether or not you were asked the question once before is irrelevant, since you have no memory of it. The arrangement of the two coins can be correlated to the arrangement in the first pass, or not, for the same reason.

    The point of my "alternate version" that I presented above is that it creates what is, to your knowledge, the same probability space on each pass. Just like this one.It exactly implements what Elga described as the SB problem. He changed it, by creating a difference between the first and second passes. The first pass ignores the coin, so only the second depends on it.

    What you describe, where the (single) coin isn't established until the second pass, is manipulating Elga's change to emphasize that the coin is ignored in the first pass. It has nothing to do with what I've tried to convey. The only question it raises, is if Elga's version correctly implements his problem.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem
    What if the experiment ends after the Monday interview if heads, with the lab shut down and Sleeping Beauty sent home? Heads and Tuesday is as irrelevant as Heads and Friday.Michael

    Then, in the "scenario most frequently discussed," SB is misinformed about the details of the experiment. In mine, the answer is 1/3.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem

    Your proposed scenario certainly provides an interesting variation, but it doesn't quite correspond to the structure of the situation typically discussed in literature, the one that seems to give rise to a paradox.Pierre-Normand

    You seem to be confused about chickens and eggs, so let me summarize the history:

    • The original problem was formulated by Arnold Zuboff, and was shared amongst a small group. Its scenario lasted for a huge number of days (I've seen a thousand and a trillion). Based on the same coin flip we know of today, the subject would be wakened either every day, or once on a randomly selected day in this period.
    • The second version of the problem came out when Adam Elga put it in the public domain in 2000. In his statement of the problem (seen above), he reduced Zuboff's number of days to two. But he did not specify the day for the "Heads" waking. So it was implied that the order was still random.
    • But he did not address that problem directly. He changed it into a third version, where he did fix the day for the "Heads" waking on Monday.
    • He apparently did this because he could isolate the commonality between {Mon,Tails} and {Mon,Heads} by telling SB that it was Monday. And then the commonality between {Mon,Tails} and {Tue,Tails} by telling her that the coin landed on Tails.That is how he got his solution, by working backwards from these two special cases to his third version of the problem.
    • You could say that Elga created three "levels" of the probability space. The "laboratory" space, where the coin flip is clearly a 1/2:1/2 chance, the "awakened" space where we seek an answer, and the "informed" spaces where SB knows that {Mon,Tails}, and whichever other is still possible, are equally likely.
    • The "situation typically discussed in literature" is about how the informed spaces should relate to the awakened space. Not the problem itself.
    All the "situation typically discussed in literature" accomplishes is how well, or poorly, Elga was able to relate these "informed" spaces to the "awakened" space in the third version of the problem. And the controversy has more to do with that, than the actual answer to the second version.

    All I did, was create an alternative third version, one that correctly implements the second version. If you want to debate anything here, the issue is more whether Elga's third version correctly implements his second. If it does, then a correct answer (that is, the probability, not the way to arrive at the number) to mine is the correct answer to Elga's. It can tell you who is right about the solution to Elga's third version

    That answer is 1/3. And Elga's thrid verion is a correct version of his second, since he could have fixed the Heads waking on Tuesday and arrived at the same answer.

    In your scenario, there are four potential outcomes from the experiment, each of which is equally probable.Pierre-Normand
    And in the "scenario most frequently discussed," there is a fourth potential outcome that halfers want to say is not a potential outcome. SB can be left asleep on Tuesday. This is an outcome in the "laboratory" space whether or not SB can observe it. It needs to be accounted for in the probability calculations, but in the "frequent discussions" in "typical literature," the halfers remove it entirely. Rather than assign it the probability it deserves and treating the knowledge that it isn't happening as "new information."

    And the reason they prefer to remove it, rather than deal with it, is that there is no orthodox way to deal with it. That's why Elga created the two "informed" spaces; they are "awakened" sub-spaces that do not need to consider it.

    That's all I did as well, but without making two cases out of it. I placed that missing outcome, the fourth one you described, in a place where you can deal with it but can't ignore it.

    And there are other ways to do this. In the "scenario most frequently discussed" just change {Tue,Heads} to a waking day. But instead of interviewing her, take her on a shopping trip at Saks. Now she does have "new information" when she is interviewed, and her answer is 1/3. My question to you is, why should it matter what happens on {Tue, Heads} as long as it is something other than an interview?

    Or, use four volunteers. Three will be wakened each day. Each is assigned a different combination of {DAY, COIN} for when she would be left asleep. The one assigned {Tue, Heads} is the SB in the "scenario most frequently discussed."

    One each day, bring the three together and ask each what the probability is, that this is her only waking. None can logically give a different answer than the others, and only one of them fits that description. The answer is 1/3.

    And my point is that, while these "frequent discussions" might be interesting to some, there is a way to say which gets the right answer. Rather than arguing about why one should be called the tight solution. The answer is 1/3.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem

    I'm not going to wade through 14 pages. The answer is 1/3, and it is easy to prove. What is hard, is getting those who don't want that to be the answer to accept it.

    First, what most think is the problem statement, was the method proposed by Adam Elga (in his 2000 paper "Self-locating belief and Sleeping Beauty problem") to implement the experiment. The correct problem statement was:
    Some researchers are going to put you to sleep. During the [experiment], they will briefly wake you up either once or twice, depending on the toss of a fair coin (Heads: once; Tails: twice). After each waking, they will put you to back to sleep with a drug that makes you forget that waking. When you [are awake], to what degree ought you believe that the outcome of the coin toss is
    Heads?

    The two changes I made do not affect anything in the problem, but they do show that Elga was already thinking of how he would implement his thirder solution. The first change is where he brought up "two days," and confused the continuation of the experiment with continuation of sleep. The second suggested that your (or SB's) information might change while you are (she is) awake, which is how Elga solved the problem piecewise.

    But what Elga added made the circumstances of the two (if there are to be two) wakings different. And it is this difference that is the root of the controversy that has occurred ever since.

    Patient: Doctor, Doctor, it hurts if I do this.
    Doctor: Then don't do that.

    But the difference Elga introduced was unnecessary. So don't do it; do this instead:
    1. Tell SB all the details listed here.
    2. Put SB to sleep.
    3. Flip two coins. Call them C1 and C2.
    4. Procedure start:
    5. If both coins are showing Heads, skip to Procedure End.
    6. Wake SB.
    7. Ask SB "to what degree do you believe that coin C1 is currently showing Heads?"
    8. After she answers, put her back to sleep with amnesia.
    9. Procedure End.
    10. Turn coin C2 over, to show its opposite side.
    11. Repeat the procedure.
    12. Wake SB to end the experiment.

    When SB is awake, she knows that she is in the middle of the procedure listed in steps 4 thru 9. Regardless of which pass thru these steps it is, she knows that in step 5 of this pass, there were four equally-likely combinations for what (C1,C2) were showing: {(H,H),(H,T),(T,H),(T,T)}. This is the "prior" sample space.

    She also knows that the fact that she is awake eliminates (H,H) as a possibility. This is a classic example of "new information" that allows her to update the probabilities. With three (still equally likely) possibilities left, each has a posterior probability of 1/3. Since in only one is coin C1 currently showing Heads, the answer is 1/3.

    The reason for the controversy, is that the difference Elga introduced between the first and (potential) second wakings obfuscates the prior sample space. This implementation has no such problem.

    But I'm positive that halfers will try to invent one. I've seen it happen too many times to think otherwise.
  • Sleeping Beauty Problem

    I'm not sure what your point was, but you can't make a valid one by leaving out half of the quote.
    when the researchers looked at the coins, there are four possible arrangements with probability 1/4 each: {HH, HT, TH, TT}.JeffJo

    The state of the system at that time consisted of four equally-likely possibilities. SB knows, from the experiment set up, about these four equally-likely possibilities. But she also knows that the current state of the system does not include HH. It matters not what the state would be (asleep, gone shopping, whatever) if it did include HH, because she knows that it does not.

    Except for the unusual setup, this is a classic example of an introductory-level conditional probability problem. Within her knowledge, the conditional probability of HT is now 1/3.

    The fallacy in the halfer argument is that they confuse the changing state of the system, with what SB was aware could be possible states when the experiment started on Sunday. They do this because they can't describe the current state in terms of SB's knowledge when she is awake.

    The point of my variation is to make the current state of the system functionally the same anytime she is asked the question.