DistantVoyeur said:
This is statistical smoke and mirrors. Take the third door out of the puzzle and you have 2 doors. The car is behind one of them. You have a 50% chance of being right and a 50% chance of being wrong. Switching still give you the same odds.
The car is either there, or it is not. 2 choices, 2 chances. Switching does nothing to change your odds.
The 3rd door is a confounding variable that has been eliminated from the equation after it is opened.
Take the question to an extreme to see how it works.
Say you have 100 doors, behind one of which is a car. You select one door, and before you open it, Monty opens up 98 of the other 99 doors. He knows which door the car is behind, and deliberately chooses which doors to reveal so that the car is still hidden.
So, now you have two doors unopened still -- one that you originally chose, and the other that Monty chose to leave unopened.
Which do you think you should now choose to open to try to find the car?
I would switch to the door Monty chose.
Why?
The first door I chose had a 1/100 chance of having the car.
The other set of doors had a 99/100 chance of having the car. What Monty did was simply narrow that set of doors down to one for me. His hand is forced a bit, as he has to choose empty doors.
So, the door Monty chose has a 99/100 chance of having the car. Choose it.