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But hey, maths is not a perfect science,


But hey, maths is not a perfect science,

But this seems intuitive:I've read dozens, if not hundreds, of explanations' in my time, as have many statisticians, but that doesn't alter the fact that most of us still have grave 'intuition problems'! There's also at least one PhD thesis about it knocking around!
That sounds like a good thing.As I wrote, the worry is that since what many experts regard as the 'obvious answer' is actually incorrect, they naturally worry about the correctness of other assertions they make about things which 'seem obvious' to them.
I'm not going to go into all this again now but, yes, that sounds pretty intuitive, but it gets more complicated when one starts to think (perhaps 'too much') more deeply, not the least because it becomes quite easy to end up feeling (incorrectly) that the correct answer flies in the face of some basic truths of probability theory.But this seems intuitive:
You pick a door. .... There's a ⅓ probability that the prize is behind your door, and a ⅔ one that it is behind one of the other two doors. .... Those probabilities cannot be changed by the show's host opening one of the doors you didn't pick. They just cant. .... So the unopened door now has to take all of the ⅔ probability that the prize is behind one of the other two doors.
Up to a point, it is. However, it continues to be a concern, particularly to those who have not yet come to fully understand why their 'intuitive' answer Monty Hall is not correct.That sounds like a good thing.
They probably are, but there's quite a lot of them.Such people are precisely the ones who should be cautious about going what seems "obvious" or "intuitive" to them.
That wouldn't surprise me at all, since that was the initial ('intuitive') reaction of very many experts in the field, including many professors of maths and statistics etc.If I remember correctly, didn`t a prof of maths write into the show that the producers statements about doubling the chances by changing their minds was rubbish, only to write in again the following week with the opposite view?
As perhaps concluding comment in relation to this discussion about terminology, I don't think anyone (including myself) has yet pointed out how irrelevant the discussion is to almost anything 'practical'.The only mention in this years GSCE tuition regarding decimal fractions, as I've seen it, has been solely regarding fractions containing powers of 10, IE: 1/10, 10/40 etc .....
Potentially mind-boggling, but extremely useful, even in electronics![]()
I must say that I'm struggling a bit to think how imaginary/complex numbers would come into economicsI initially encountered them on my economics degree.
Yes, other than for 'academic maths' interest, I think many of the main practical applications are in relation to electrical engineering, particularly anything to do with phase differences between two AC waveforms, since they enable both magnitude and phase of a waveform to be represented by a single expression. They also have a lot of use in relation to quantum mechanics.From memory, they were pretty important in the development of AC power distribution.
As I've said, even the Oxford Dictionary, today, agrees that "fraction" simply means non-integer, so the main debate/confusion is about how qualifying that with "decimal" changes things. You (well, GCSEs) seem to now regard it as meaning that it only refers to a representation as 'numerator over denominator" AND only if the denominator is a power of 10, whereas the traditional meaning I (and I presume also morqthana, since it was what he wrote that started all this!) was taught (a long time ago) was that it merely meant that the non-integer was expressed using decimal notation (e.g. 123.456).Until this thread I had never known the term decimal fraction to refer tor a non integer, only ever refering to powers of 10 fractions.
I must say that I'm struggling a bit to think how imaginary/complex numbers would come into economics![]()

Morqthana gave a very concise and simple explanation of the reasoning behind the correct answer. He called that reasoning 'intuitive', but if that really was his initial thought about the issue, then that would make him pretty exceptional, 'superior' to many of those professors etc.
The problem arises because those very professors will be drumming into their students the fact that if the prize is put, at random, behind one of three doors, with equal probability that it is behind each of the doors, then the probability of it being behind any particular door is 1/3 "...and nothing can change that". If one takes that view
(and it becomes part of one's 'intuition'), then one will conclude that there will always be the same probability (1/3) of the prize being behind the contestant's chosen door and the one they are invited to 'swap to', regardless of anything else that has happened (i.e. the host having opened a door).
The issue is that that "...and nothing can change that" (which is essentially what is always taught, usually 'drummed in') is not strictly true.
The probabilities can change IF 'new information' is brought to bear on the situation - in this case by the host being constrained to open a door with the knowledge that the prize is not behind it - thereby, as morqthana said, shifting all of the 2/3 probability into the door that the host didn't open.
However, that then leads many to another 'thought problem'. If they arrive on the scene after the host has opened a door, all they see is two doors, one of which has the prize behind it, and therefore tend to 'subconciously assume' that the probabilities of the prize between those two doors being equal (i.e. 1/2 each)
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