Stephen Tu, on 2016-July-15, 22:37, said:
No, we aren't drawing false conclusions. We are drawing correct conclusions, in fact the same conclusion. You are apparently blind to the fact that both arguments are drawing the *same* conclusion, not different conclusions, and that both are correct.
If you lose a finesse to an equal. it is *not* "as likely to be a loner or from combined honors". It's twice as likely that the honor was a loner. That is the whole gist behind restricted choice. A loner will be played 100% of the time. Combined, that particular honor would be chosen to play approximately half the time against an opponent that randomizes. It's only "as likely to be a loner or from combined honors" if an opponent nearly always chooses a particular honor from the combined honors and he plays that honor he favors. Then a second finesse is basically 100% against the disfavored honor, but only 50% against the other. Combined odds will still be 2:1 to succeed.
I don't know who you think is saying that an equal is as likely to be a loner as combined. That implies second finesse is only 1:1, not 2:1. RC is not claiming that. It is claiming 2:1, exactly the same as you. The principle is correct.
The second finesse is 2:1 to succeed using both arguments. This is a correct conclusion. Neither is false. If RC gives the exact same answer as your 2:1 answer, how is it a false conclusion? If your argument is right, and RC agrees with same answer, then either both are right or both are wrong! Logically RC cannot be wrong while your argument being correct if it is claiming the same result!
Wow. You have it all backwards. It is I who believe a lone honor is twice as likely a prioi to win a double finesse. Restricted Choice tries to have it both ways by first asserting they are of equal frequency (lone vs from combined) BUT FOR their claim that plays from combined equals can be expected to occur at only half the frequency of their expectation. That is what restricted choice is all about.
So by dividing by two, they come up with the right answer (which is coincidentally my answer).
And I have never said that a double finesse is as likely to lose to a lone honor as a combined honor. Again, that is restricted choice's first of contradicting positions. (They say odds should be 50% but then chop it down to 1/3 because, you know..
Lone and combined honors first plays in open play come equally in frequency and can be in either hand. A finesse targets ONE hand which is half as likely, or 50%.
That seems to be ignored in RC but dividing the hands by 2 might be a clue.
Your apparently not a teacher with your ** "If your argument is right, and RC agrees with same answer, then either both are right or both are wrong!"
So you think if I say 2+2=4, and RC says no it's because it's actually 2 cubed divided by the number of integers being added, also giving 4, that both are right or wrong? I see...