The Bertrand Box paradox illustrates how intuition can fail when dealing with conditional probability. Imagine three sealed boxes: one contains two gold coins (GG), another contains two silver coins (SS), and the third contains one gold and one silver coin (GS). A box is chosen at random, then a coin is drawn at random from that box.
If the drawn coin happens to be gold, the question is: what is the probability that the remaining coin in the same box is also gold? Many people answer 1/2, but the correct answer is 2/3 because the GG box is twice as likely to produce a gold coin as the GS box.
Mathematically the problem is expressed by the conditional probability formula below. It compares the number of ways to draw a gold coin from a GG box (two ways per GG box) with the total number of ways to draw a gold coin from any box (two ways per GG box plus one way per GS box).
What is Bertrand's Box Paradox?
Why does intuition fail in this paradox?
How do I use this calculator?
What are the possible outcomes for the boxes?
Can this calculator be used for other probability problems?
What is the correct answer to the paradox?
Results are for informational purposes only and do not constitute professional advice.
