Binge Artist
Bluelighter
The difficulty here seems to be finding the proper language with which to analyze the problem. Ie, what questions do we ask, and how do we answer them.
With Monty Hall, it's pretty easy. The question is "Should we switch doors?", and the answer is obtained by looking at how switchers vs non switchers fare over repeated trials.
In this Sleeping Beauty problem, I can't seem to find the right question. My best guess so far is, "Should Sleeping Beauty guess heads?".
To answer this, I bought a huge sack of roofies, gathered up several homeless women, stole a coin from one of them, and did some experimenting. 32 of these women were instructed to say "Heads" upon awakening, and the remaining 29 were instructed to guess tails. Since both groups faired roughly equally well (yes, the women who correctly answered tails were correct twice , unlike women who correctly guessed heads, but...w/e, this doesn't seem relavant regarding the bold question), my inclination is to guess A.
So, to paraphrase this, if this was one of those scenerios where Sleeping Beauty would be executed if she guessed incorrectly, and if I was one of those conventional logic puzzle "wise men", then I would see no reason to tell her, going into this, to favor heads over tails, or tails over heads. ATM, to me at least, they seem equally likely, thus making A my answer.
However...when I first saw the Monty Hall problem, my instinct was 50/50 as well. It wasn't until I saw a worked out solution that I realized what was going on.
So, I'm probably wrong here...which makes my NEW answer B.
With Monty Hall, it's pretty easy. The question is "Should we switch doors?", and the answer is obtained by looking at how switchers vs non switchers fare over repeated trials.
In this Sleeping Beauty problem, I can't seem to find the right question. My best guess so far is, "Should Sleeping Beauty guess heads?".
To answer this, I bought a huge sack of roofies, gathered up several homeless women, stole a coin from one of them, and did some experimenting. 32 of these women were instructed to say "Heads" upon awakening, and the remaining 29 were instructed to guess tails. Since both groups faired roughly equally well (yes, the women who correctly answered tails were correct twice , unlike women who correctly guessed heads, but...w/e, this doesn't seem relavant regarding the bold question), my inclination is to guess A.
So, to paraphrase this, if this was one of those scenerios where Sleeping Beauty would be executed if she guessed incorrectly, and if I was one of those conventional logic puzzle "wise men", then I would see no reason to tell her, going into this, to favor heads over tails, or tails over heads. ATM, to me at least, they seem equally likely, thus making A my answer.
However...when I first saw the Monty Hall problem, my instinct was 50/50 as well. It wasn't until I saw a worked out solution that I realized what was going on.
So, I'm probably wrong here...which makes my NEW answer B.
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