No, in God’s coin toss the probability is random. At least that’s what I took it as, since it’s described as a coin toss. The reason the answer is 1⁄2 there is just because the number of observations of being in room 1-10 is equal in the heads-case and the tails-case (10 in both). This is the image of the experiment I made in the post. If it was 2000 people in the tails-case, 2 in every room number, then the answer would be 1⁄3 for heads.
In other words, it is similar to the the God coin toss—you can’t update logical uncertainty based on your location?
No, in God’s coin toss the probability is random. At least that’s what I took it as, since it’s described as a coin toss. The reason the answer is 1⁄2 there is just because the number of observations of being in room 1-10 is equal in the heads-case and the tails-case (10 in both). This is the image of the experiment I made in the post. If it was 2000 people in the tails-case, 2 in every room number, then the answer would be 1⁄3 for heads.