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I draw thirty cards from a regular deck (4 suits x 13 cards each). The only fact I know is:

As I draw cards from the deck, the next draw is randomly chosen from the remaining cards in the deck

How can I find the probability that the last card drawn is a spade?

I have no doubt that it's $\large \frac{1}{4}$. But I don't know how to prove it formally.

In other words, how do I prove that the deck with the above property represents a fully random shuffle?

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    There are $52!$ possible orderings of the deck. The number of orderings that have a spade as the thirtieth card is $13\cdot 51!$. As we have a sample space consisting of equally likely outcomes...2012-12-08

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Any argument showing that the probability that that card is a spade is a certain number, would likewise show that the probability that that card is a heart is that same number. And similarly for the other two suits. They're mutually exclusive and exhaustive. So $ x+x+x+x=1. $ Now solve for $x$.

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    I assume all that we need to formalize this is to observe that there indeed e$x$ists an argument which shows that the probability in question is a certain number, since at the very least we can simply enumerate all the cases. (BTW.. I wonder if there are any cases where the symmetry argument breaks down *only* because it's unclear if the required argument exists; i.e., it's possible that the question about the value of the number is unsolvable. Clearly, it can't happen with probabilities on a finite space, but perhaps in other areas?)2012-12-08