CRGreathouse
Community Supporter
The Sigil said:When the man produces the picture of his son, you only learn that he belongs to the first 75% of people... AND NOTHING MORE!
The correct answer to this portion of the question (and thus the entire problem) depends on interpretation. Here are the two:
Sigil's: "Is the gender of either of your childern male?" "Yes"
Mine: "What is the gender of a random child of yours?" "Male"
Deciding this decides the problem.
Zappo said:Ahem... why do you place MM(M) and FF(F) twice?
The first is the chance that nthe older of the two boys is pictured; the second is the chance that the younger of the two boys is pictured.
Zappo said:And why not MM(F) and FF(M)?
It's not possible to have a picture of the daughter if there is no daughter.
Zappo said:First Second (pictured)
MM(M)
MM(F)
MF(M)
MF(F)
FM(M)
FM(F)
FF(M)
FF(F)
Eliminating the impossible ones:
MM(M)
MF(M)
FM(M)
Thus, a 2/3 chance.
I'll use your reasoning with the same problem, except that the picture is hidden.
First Second (pictured)
MM(M)
MM(F)
MF(M)
MF(F)
FM(M)
FM(F)
FF(M)
FF(F)
Eliminating the impossible ones:
MM(M)
MF(M)
MF(F)
FM(M)
FM(F)
FF(F)
Thus, the chance of two boys (with no further infomation) is 1/6.
Since this is an obvious contradiction, your reasoning is flawed.