← Back to Library

The most controversial problem in philosophy

Derek Muller presents one of philosophy's most enduring puzzles: a problem that has generated hundreds of academic papers over 22 years without any consensus. This is the Sleeping Beauty problem — and it matters because it exposes something fundamental about how we think about probability, consciousness, and what it means to wake up.

The Setup

Muller begins by laying out the experiment with careful precision. "The Monday when it came up heads or it could be the Monday when it comes up Tails or it could be the Tuesday when it comes up Tales" — three possible outcomes he argues should each receive equal weight. His intuitive answer was one-third, and he believes most people would arrive at the same conclusion.

The most controversial problem in philosophy

But this is where the problem becomes genuinely confusing. As Muller notes, "She knows the coin is fair nothing changes between when the coin is flipped and when she wakes up and she knew for a fact that she would be woken up and she receives no new information when that happens." The halfers — those who argue for 50% — insist that waking up provides no additional information. A fair coin was flipped, and the experimenter's procedures don't change the underlying probability.

The Thirder Position

The third position gets its power from a subtle but compelling shift in perspective. "She actually learns something important she learns that she's gone from existing in a reality where there are two possible states the coin came up either heads or tails to existing in a reality where there are three possible states Monday heads, Monday Tales or Tuesday Tales and therefore she should assign equal probability to each of these three outcomes." This is the core of what makes the problem so philosophically rich — the act of waking up itself becomes information about which scenario we're in.

Muller uses the Monty Hall problem as an analogy to illustrate why having three possible outcomes doesn't guarantee equal probabilities. "In the Monty Hall problem for example the contestant ultimately has to choose between two doors but it'd be wrong to assign them 50/50 odds the prize is actually twice as likely to be behind one door than the other." The parallel is instructive: we must account for the actual likelihoods, not simply count possibilities.

If you want to be right about the outcome of the coin tosses well you should say the probability of heads is a half but if you want to answer more questionings correctly well then you should say one-third.

This distinction — being right versus answering correctly — is the heart of the dispute. And it reveals something important about what probability actually means in subjective experiences.

The Soccer Test

But Muller doesn't simply advocate for one side. He presents a thought experiment that genuinely challenges his own position: a soccer match where Brazil has an 80% chance of winning, but if Canada wins, you'll be woken up thirty times instead of once. "The thirder would say Canada but I would almost certainly say Brazil." This is the crucial test — if waking up more often in one scenario should bias our beliefs, shouldn't the much larger number of potential wake-ups for a Canada loss fundamentally change our assessment?

This counterexample is devastating to the third position because it suggests that simply knowing you'd be woken up more frequently under certain outcomes doesn't help you guess which outcome actually occurred. You still default to the base rate.

The Simulation Argument

Muller then extends this reasoning to one of philosophy's most unsettling ideas: we might be living in a simulation. "If it can happen then it probably has happened and we are living in a simulation." He uses this to show how the third position leads to some genuinely strange conclusions — that being woken up more often under certain conditions doesn't tell you which condition actually occurred, just as waking up in Sleeping Beauty doesn't tell you whether the coin was heads or tails.

The analogy works because it reveals the same logical trap: more instances of a scenario existing doesn't make you more likely to be in that scenario. The simulation argument is essentially an application of the third principle taken to its uncomfortable extreme.

Counterarguments

Critics might note that Muller conflates two different questions: what probability should Sleeping Beauty assign given her information, and what probability would maximize correct answers over repeated trials. These are genuinely different problems — one is epistemic, one is pragmatic. The halfers would insist she's being asked the first question, not the second.

A further complication: the experiment's design arguably creates a sampling bias. If we repeat this experiment infinitely, we'd wake up on Tuesday only when the coin was tails — meaning we'd experience more "Tuesday" awakenings than "Monday" ones in the tails case. But that doesn't change what happened in any single toss.

Bottom Line

Muller's strongest contribution is making the Sleeping Beauty problem accessible without oversimplifying it. His weakest move is ending on a sponsor's pitch rather than letting the philosophical tension speak for itself. The video's real value isn't in choosing a side — it's in showing why both sides find the other answer "obviously" wrong. That's what makes this problem a genuine philosophical controversy worth 22 years of debate.

Sources

The most controversial problem in philosophy

by Derek Muller · Veritasium · Watch video

do not hit the like button or the dislike button at least not yet I want you to consider a problem that's been one of the most controversial in math and philosophy over the past 20 years there is no consensus answer so I want you to listen to the problem and then vote for the answer you prefer using the like and dislike buttons okay here is the setup Sleeping Beauty volunteers to be the subject of an experiment and before it starts she's informed of the procedure on Sunday night she will be put to sleep and then a Fair coin will be flipped if that coin comes up heads she'll be awakened on Monday and then put back to sleep if the coin comes up Tails she will also be awakened on Monday and put back to sleep but then she will be awakened on Tuesday as well and then put back to sleep now each time she gets put back to sleep she will forget that she was ever awakened in the brief period anytime she's awake she will be told no information but she'll be asked one question what do you believe is the probability that the coin came up heads so how should she answer feel free to pause the video and answer the question for yourself right now this was my reaction after hearing the problem for the first time the intuitive answer that pops into my head is clearly one in three it could be the Monday when it came up heads or it could be the Monday when it came up Tails or it could be the Tuesday when it came up Tails but what's really interesting is you just answered that the probability of a coin coming up heads is one-third I think a lot of this comes down to what specific question is asked of her what is the probability that a Fair coin flipped gives heads that's 50 what is the probability that the coin came up heads I would say the answer is a third from her perspective yeah I it's it's remarkably the same question the simple reason why Sleeping Beauty should say the probability of heads is one half is because she knows the coin is fair nothing changes between when the coin is flipped and when she wakes up and she knew for a ...