What I think is happening is Alan doesn't truly read any of the comments. Even the ones he responds to. He just skims them at best. Hence, he doesn't have a clue what you said. Since he's already made up his mind I think he just assumes it is a waste of his time. The reason I said he was lying last night was kind of a slap in the face. I wanted to get his attention. It did for a brief moment and you could see from his response he hadn't read my previous comment at all ... and then he went right back into ignore mode.
So, I can see where you get that impression. You really are talking to a wall. In general, wall's aren't real bright.
Last edited by RS__; 05-13-2015 at 03:38 PM.
But its just one pair of dice. We set them one combo at a time as if we are throwing a pair of perfectly-distributed-dice and examine if there is a two showing. And then the bets are on.
I'm trying to see the light as well and if Alan can really state his point clearly maybe I'll convert too, who knows..."cough" doubtful "cough"
You are correct, Alan, this is a trick question. I want to explain why it's a trick question. It's something I think everyone is missing the point on. The question asks, "If you roll the dice, and at least one is a 2, what are the odds that BOTH dice rolled a 2?".
That's the wording of the original question, and it's worded pretty different than normal speech. Normally, you would ask the question, "If you roll the dice and at least one of the the die is a 2, what are the odds the OTHER die also rolled a 2?" You wouldn't ask about both dice, after explaining that one is already a 2, you would just ask about the OTHER die.
This is why it's a trick question. In the original question, the answer is 1/11, the odds of BOTH dice rolling a 2 is 1 in 11. And, that's what the question asks. It's not asking the odds of the other die rolling a 2, it's only asking the odds for BOTH dice rolling 2's.
In the second question, the one you would ask in normal speech, the chances of the OTHER die also rolling a 2 is 1/6. The odds of 1 particular die rolling a 2 is 1 in 6. And that's what the 2nd question asks. It doesn't ask the odds for BOTH dice rolling 2's, only the "other" die.
This is why the question is a trick question. It asks the question in a different way than you would normally speak, and by doing this it gives a different answer than would normally be given.
I think a lot of these math guys don't understand why it's a trick question, most would probably, incorrectly, give the same 1/11 answer to both wordings of the question. It just so happens, in this case they are correct, the question asks the odds of BOTH dice rolling a 2, that's 1/11. If the question was asked about the "other" die, you would be right with 1/6, and I'm guessing most of the math guys would give the wrong answer of 1/11. But, this is why it's a trick question.
If you do the experiment itself, you'll see that BOTH dice will roll 2's 1 in 11 times. And, the "other" die will have a 1 in 6 chance of rolling a 2, just like in your video. So, depending on whether you say BOTH dice, or if you say the OTHER die, you'll get 2 different answers.
The original question asks for BOTH dice, it does that on purpose, to get the 1/11 answer, because if it asked about the "other" die, it would get a totally different answer of 1/6 (and this would trick a lot of people who think it's 1/11). Hope this helps explain why this is such a tricky question for you.
I don't think Alan quite understands how dice even work. Really.
There was a discussion before on the WOV forum about how if a dice controller could change the house edge. Alan's opinion was that no -- you could not change the edge, because every number has a 1/36 and 2/36 chance of being rolled, simply because each die has 6 faces x 6 faces.
Even after I gave an example, like, what if you could throw a 7 1/10 times and a 6 1/4.5 times and an 8 1/5 times....would the edge change on the 6 and 8? Alan said no, it does not, because there are 5/36 ways to roll a 6, 5/36 ways to roll an 8, and 1/6 [6/36] ways to roll a 7.
The one game Alan thought he was a master of (craps)....he really knowing nothing about.
Wait wouldn't it be 1/36 for both dice to be a deuce? :claps_hands:
I think you are wrong.
Take two dice.
Look at those dice.
Each die has 6 faces
That's 12 faces all together
So that's twelve different ways that they can land. Count them.
1 of those ways is Deuce Deuce.
So you can throw Deuce Deuce ON AVERAGE 1/12 of the time.
1/36 is just a trick played by the casino to maximise its edge.
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