MandrakeRoot Posted June 15, 2004 Posted June 15, 2004 No clearly not ! What is true is the following P(A) = P(A | B)P(B) + P(A | B' ) P(B ') (wet of total likelyhood) and where B' denotes the complement of B in Omega Mandrake
5614 Posted June 15, 2004 Posted June 15, 2004 ive never seen that equation before, or maybe i have with different letters or something, or maybe i learnt it a while ago, but anyway; like madrakeRoot said, clearly one does not equal another, it is mathematically impossible
bloodhound Posted June 15, 2004 Posted June 15, 2004 ive never seen that equation before' date=' or maybe i have with different letters or something, or maybe i learnt it a while ago, but anyway; [/quote'] thats just the "theorem of total probability" which just states that Let [math]E_1,E_2,...[/math] be a partition of [math]\Omega[/math] and let F be the proper subset of [math]\Omega[/math]. Then [math]P(F)=\sum_i{P(F|E_i)P(E_i)}[/math]
MandrakeRoot Posted June 16, 2004 Posted June 16, 2004 Yes i partinioned Omega into two subsets to keep it simple Mandrake
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