The probability that event M occurs is .68. The probability that event R occurs is .42. If p is the probability that M will occur but R will not, what

College Algebra
7th Edition
ISBN:9781305115545
Author:James Stewart, Lothar Redlin, Saleem Watson
Publisher:James Stewart, Lothar Redlin, Saleem Watson
Chapter9: Counting And Probability
Section9.3: Binomial Probability
Problem 2E: If a binomial experiment has probability p success, then the probability of failure is...
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The probability that event M occurs is .68. The probability that event R occurs is .42. If p is the probability that M will occur but R will not, what are the range of probabilities for p?

 

 

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Can you explain:

P(M^c ) union P(R)= P(M^c) +P(R)

 

I thought this was true for only mutually exclusive events? Tha

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