...which I am of course blaming you lot for.
Anyhow, let's try again and reprise.
There are two sealed envelopes and one contains twice the amount of money than the other. That's all you know.
You are given one of the sealed envelopes.
You are told that you can either keep the envelope you've got... or exchange for the other sealed envelope. Is there anything you can do in order to maximise potential gain?
I say "switch" on the apparently logical basis that if I decide to term the unknown amount I am holding x and I switch, then I have a 50% chance of ending up with x/2 and a 50% chance of ending up with 2x. To me, switching then produces an average result of ending up with 1.25x, so must be a good thing.
But then what happens if, having switched, you're offered the exact same choice again? Don't you end up in a position where you should infinitely switch? That's clearly ludicrous?
And another thing... why does the maths apparently change if - going back to the startpoint - I alter the frame of reference and instead merely decide to term the unknown amount in the OTHER envelope x? If I do that, then in that frame of reference, I've ALREADY GOT either x/2 or 2x, so I SHOULDN'T then switch?
This one seriously twists my melon, man.
Oh and before any smartass starts with some reference to zero sum games and it making no difference, because regardless, you'll come out with some level of gain, that answer is not gonna be accepted... you tried to bamboozle me with that one before. Let's presume that whoever loaded up and sealed the envelopes used your own money to fill one of them... and you don't know how much he used, or if he filled the other envelope with double the amount of his own money or half the amount of his own money.


