What is the probability of drawing a spade from a deck of 51 cards?

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The probability of drawing a spade from a deck of 51 cards, after losing one card from a standard 52-card deck, can be calculated by considering two scenarios: losing a spade or losing a non-spade. The correct approach involves partitioning the sample space into these two events, leading to the conclusion that the probability is 1/4 if the lost card was a spade and 1/3 if it was not. The discussion highlights confusion regarding the definitions of events and the application of conditional probability. Ultimately, the focus is on accurately determining how to partition the sample space to resolve the probability question. Understanding the terminology and structure of events is crucial for clarity in probability calculations.
hholzer
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Suppose you had a normal deck of 52 playing
cards and lost a card. You then decide to draw
a card from the remaining 51 cards.

What is the probability the drawn card is a spade?

Would this be appropriately captured by the following
events:
A : event card was drawn from the deck
S : event card drawn is a spade
S^c : event card drawn is not a spade

then

P(A) = P(A | S)P(S) + P(A|S^c)P(S^c)

But this is annoying me because
if we called S "event card drawn is a spade"
and A "event card was drawn from deck"
then P(A | S) doesn't seem to make much
sense to me. That is, "event card drawn
from the deck given drawn card is a spade"
is pretty much incoherent.

What am I missing or how can I resolve this issue?
 
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hi hholzer! :smile:
hholzer said:
Suppose you had a normal deck of 52 playing
cards and lost a card. You then decide to draw
a card from the remaining 51 cards.

What is the probability the drawn card is a spade?

Would this be appropriately captured by the following
events:
A : event card was drawn from the deck …

(btw, that's not the way we use the word "event" :wink:)

I don't understand what your A is supposed to be :confused:

You want P(S) …

split it up into P(S|lost card was a spade) and P(S|lost card was not a spade) :smile:

(are you sure you've copied the question correctly? it seems obvious the answer is 0.25 :confused:)
 
Ah, that's what I was trying to determine. So we break it up into
(Lost card was spade) and (Lose card not spade).

The answer is indeed 1/4 but I was more concerned
with how we partition the sample space.

And on the word "event", "event" is a subset of your sample space,
as you of course know. The three events would be:

S = {card randomly drawn from deck of 51 cards is a spade }
A = {lost card is a spade }
A^c = { lost card is not a spade }
 

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