Originally Posted by
onyx99
One more thing... one might argue that you *do* have extra information in the case where a 2 is set aside ("frozen") from the start: namely, you know *which* die is a guaranteed 2. Perhaps that extra information changes the probability to 1/6. This is sort of true, and bears on the business with spinners and so on; but it's also vague and a little misleading, in that it reinforces the misconception that "same information = same probabilities". Let there be a red die and a green die, and tell your friend to show you a 2 if there is one (with no color bias), and let your friend reveal a red 2. You now have *exactly* the same definitive information ("the red die is a 2") as you would if the red die were set aside as a 2 and only the green die were rolled. And yet (since the addition of the colors is purely cosmetic), the probability that the green die is a 2, in this situation, remains 1/11.
I find this scenario, if anything, even more counterintuitive than the original one. The assumption of no color bias is key here. If your friend shows you the green whenever he can, the probability that the green die is a 2 given that he showed you the red die is *zero*. If he shows you the red die whenever he can, then the probability that the green die is a 2 given that he showed you the red die is 1/6. This extra complexity is swept under the rug... and the no-bias condition is enforced... when the dice are indistinguishable.