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A Renaissance gambling dispute spawned probability theory

2 days ago
  • #mathematical puzzles
  • #expected value
  • #probability history
  • The 'problem of points' involves fairly dividing stakes in an interrupted game of chance, like a coin-flipping contest where the first to 10 points wins $100.
  • Luca Pacioli proposed splitting the pot based on current points ratio, but this fails in extreme cases (e.g., after one flip).
  • Tartaglia suggested awarding a player based on their lead relative to the total game length, but this also led to unfair outcomes in close games.
  • Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat solved it by considering future possibilities, founding modern probability theory.
  • Fermat's method lists all possible game continuations to calculate win probabilities, while Pascal used backward induction from tied scores.
  • Both methods converge on the same solution, using expected value (weighted averages of outcomes), exemplified by an 8-6 score yielding $81.25 for the leading player.
  • Expected value is now fundamental to risk assessment in fields like insurance and finance, providing a rigorous way to price uncertainty.