What are your chances of dying on your next flight, being called for jury duty, or winning the lottery? We all encounter probability problems in our everyday lives. In this collection of 212 puzzles, the author challenges us to think creatively about the laws of probability as they apply in playful, sometimes deceptive, ways to a fascinating array of speculative situations. Games of Russian roulette, problems involving the accumulation of insects on flypaper; and strategies for determining the odds of the underdog winning the World Series all reveal intriguing dimensions to the working of probability. Over the years, the author, a veteran writer and teacher of the subject, has collected these and other favourite puzzles designed to instruct and entertain math enthusiasts of all backgrounds. If idiots A and B alternately take aim at each other with a six-shot revolver containing one bullet, what is the probability idiot A will win? what are the chance it will snow on your birthday in any given year? how can researchers use coin flipping and the laws of probability to obtain honest answers to embarrassing survey questions?
The solutions are presented here in detail, and many contain a profound element of surprise. And some puzzles are beautiful illustrations of basic mathematical concepts: "The Blind Spider and the Fly", for example, is a clever variation of a "random walk" problem,, and "Duelling Idiots" and "The Underdog and the World Series" are straightforward introductions to binomial distributions. Written in an informal way and containing a plethora of interesting historical materials, this book should be of interest for those who are fascinated by mathematics and the role it plays in everyday life and in our imaginations.
- ISBN13 9781400843046
- Publish Date 22 July 2012 (first published 1 October 2000)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Princeton University Press
- Format eBook
- Pages 304
- Language English
- URL http://degruyter.com/search?f_0=isbnissn&q_0=9781400843046&searchTitles=true