Originally Posted by
Alan Mendelson
kewl you are simply making the same mistake that the Wizard and all the others made: you ignored the condition presented in the question. This is why I asked the Wizard and everyone else to do a video so we could see using real, physical dice how you interpret the question and the condition -- and you all made same mistake: you wouldn't accept that you can't change the value of a die.
Go back to the Wizard's video and what does he do? First he shows a die as a 2, and then he goes through the math mumbo-jumbo of changing the value of that die.
Of course you guys make the claim that we don't know which of the two dice is the 2. But it doesn't matter when you have a problem involving only two dice. Of course, you can't see that.
You ask: Where does it say you get to choose a die? I am going to ask you a related question: where does it say you can first have one die showing a 2 and and get the results, and then switch the 2 to another die and get different results and then add the two sets of results?
I am going to ask you to use your common sense for a moment: take two dice and if I tell you one of those two dice is showing a 2 pick one of the dice and set it as a 2. With one die known to be a 2, how many options are there on the other die in this two dice puzzle?
Again, what you are doing is finding the odds with one die being a 2, and then repeating the procedure for finding the odds when the other die is a 2, and then you are adding them together to get 1/11.