Take two decks of cards, minus the jokers, shuffle them together, and divide them into two piles of 52 cards. What is the probability that the number of red cards in the Pile A equals the number of black cards in Pile B? How many cards would you have to view to be certain of your answer?
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The probability is 100 percent. First suppose that Pile A is all red and Pile B all black. This fulfills the condition. Now move one red card from A to B. In order to keep 52 cards in each pile, we must also move a black card from B to A, so this new arrangement also fulfills the condition. And so on: So long as there are 52 cards of each color and 52 cards in each pile, the number of red cards in one pile must equal the number of black cards in the other. So you don’t have to view any cards at all.
See Alcohol Problem.
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