kmm
19 days ago
I think I have some sort of intuition why all the probabilities are the same.
Imagine you're standing on a randomly chosen vertex on the ring which is not right next to the starting position. At some point, the ladybug will be guaranteed to appear either to the left of you or to the right of you for the first time, and this cannot happen as the second-to-last step, because then the ladybug would have had to have visited both of your neighbors. At this point, for your vertex to be the one last visited, the ladybug would have to turn around and loop all the way around the circle to your other neighbor. But this means the previous trajectory of the ladybug and which vertices were visited before is irrelevant, as the ladybug will have to pass by them anyway. By symmetry, this situation is completely equivalent to being at the very start of the process on one of the vertices neighboring the starting position. Hence any randomly chosen vertex not next to the starting position has to have the same probability of being visited last as those two vertices. Hence all vertices have to have to same probability of being visited last.
dmurray
18 days ago
I agree with this reasoning. I think this is more than intuition, it's pretty much a formal proof.
xamidi
7 days ago
It's based on natural language in contrast to formal language, thus it is at best a social proof [1].
[1] https://mathweb.ucsd.edu/%7Esbuss/ResearchWeb/handbookI/Chap...
Eddy_Viscosity2
18 days ago
I had to read this a few times to get it, but I now that do it I like it.