Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Do trolls stalk science at night?
Look at my 2 posts below and tell, me have I explained the questioon badly or are there more than the average amount of numpty insomniacs stalking the section at night when they think the intelleigent people are not around. I'm having to do an overnight monitoring job so unusually for me I'm about at this time. I definately won't post any science questions at this time of night again.
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I really can not see what the problem is R1. Providing the cylinder is only spun at the beginning of the game everyone has a 1/6 chance of getting a hole in one. The one that will get the second turn has the same chance as the first or third.
However after the first one had a go (and survives) the other 5s chances change drastically.
If the cylinder is spun every time between shots each participant's chance is 1/6 until one of them gets 'lucky'.
However after the first one had a go (and survives) the other 5s chances change drastically.
If the cylinder is spun every time between shots each participant's chance is 1/6 until one of them gets 'lucky'.
The point is that once the order of firing has been established and the chamber has been spun, the person who is going to die has been absolutely and immutably decided. It is not decided when the bullet is fired.
If the bullet is ballanced by equal weight slugs in the other five chambers, your chance of dying is 1/6 and that's that. I you want maths, here goes (assuming that you don't have to carry on pulling the trigger once the bullet has been fired):
First person, Chance of having to pull trigger 1/1; chance of getting bullet 1/6; overall chance of death 1/6.
Second person, Chance of having to pull trigger 5/6; chance of getting bullet 1/5; overall chance of death 1/6.
Third person, Chance of having to pull trigger 4/6; chance of getting bullet 1/4; overall chance of death 1/6.
Fourth person, Chance of having to pull trigger 3/6; chance of getting bullet 1/3; overall chance of death 1/6.
Fifth person, Chance of having to pull trigger 2/6; chance of getting bullet 1/2; overall chance of death 1/6.
Last person, Chance of having to pull trigger 1/6; chance of getting bullet 1/1; overall chance of death 1/6.
But remember, these probablilities only actually exist up to the point that the chamber is spun and the fireing order is decided. After that point, the probability of death for one participant is 1 and for the other five it's zero, they just don't know who.
If the bullet is ballanced by equal weight slugs in the other five chambers, your chance of dying is 1/6 and that's that. I you want maths, here goes (assuming that you don't have to carry on pulling the trigger once the bullet has been fired):
First person, Chance of having to pull trigger 1/1; chance of getting bullet 1/6; overall chance of death 1/6.
Second person, Chance of having to pull trigger 5/6; chance of getting bullet 1/5; overall chance of death 1/6.
Third person, Chance of having to pull trigger 4/6; chance of getting bullet 1/4; overall chance of death 1/6.
Fourth person, Chance of having to pull trigger 3/6; chance of getting bullet 1/3; overall chance of death 1/6.
Fifth person, Chance of having to pull trigger 2/6; chance of getting bullet 1/2; overall chance of death 1/6.
Last person, Chance of having to pull trigger 1/6; chance of getting bullet 1/1; overall chance of death 1/6.
But remember, these probablilities only actually exist up to the point that the chamber is spun and the fireing order is decided. After that point, the probability of death for one participant is 1 and for the other five it's zero, they just don't know who.
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