lamford, on 2011-March-12, 10:21, said:
We know likely cannot mean >50% from a sentence such as "there were several likely candidates".
gordontd, on 2011-March-12, 11:38, said:
This seems to me to just be nonsense, since all we are determining is whether something is likely or not. In that context likely as >50% seems eminently reasonable.
I can make up a sentence like "There is only one likely outcome". Does this mean that likely = 100%? Of course not.
While I am not necessarily agreeing with lamford, your reasoning is not 100% correct. If one states that there is one likely outcome than that implicitly means that there are 1 or more unlikely outcomes. Now, if there is 1 other outcome with a probability of 1 %, the likely outcome has a probability of 99%. But it may well be that there are 900 unlikely other outcomes, each with a probability of 0.1 %. That leaves 10% for the "likely outcome".
In short, the boundary for what is "likely" could, in principle, be anywhere.
Now, we happen to be very fortunate here. There are only two possible outcomes:
A: Declarer chooses a winning line with the outcome that he makes his contract.
B: Declarer chooses a losing line with the outcome that he goes one down.
So,
in this particular case, I think "likely" is defined as "more likely than the other possible outcome", which is than equivalent to >50%.
Rik
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