The most often-cited example of this fallacy originated with
Amos Tversky and
Daniel Kahneman:
Linda is 31 years old, single, outspoken, and very bright. She majored in philosophy. As a student, she was deeply concerned with issues of discrimination and social justice, and also participated in anti-nuclear demonstrations. Which is more probable? • Linda is a bank teller. • Linda is a bank teller and is active in the feminist movement. The majority of those asked chose option 2. However, this is logically impossible: if Linda is a bank teller active in the feminist movement, then she is a bank teller. Therefore, it is impossible for 2 to be true while 1 is false, so the probabilities are at most equal. More generally, the
probability of two events occurring together (that is, in conjunction) is always less than or equal to the probability of either one occurring itself. For two events
A and
B this inequality can be written as \Pr(A \land B) \leq \Pr(A). For example, even choosing a very low probability of Linda's being a bank teller, say Pr(Linda is a bank teller) = 0.05 and a high probability that she would be a feminist, say Pr(Linda is a feminist) = 0.95, then, assuming
these two facts are independent of each other, Pr(Linda is a bank teller
and Linda is a feminist) = 0.05 × 0.95 or 0.0475, lower than Pr(Linda is a bank teller). Tversky and Kahneman argue that most people get this problem wrong because they use a
heuristic (an easily calculated) procedure called
representativeness to make this kind of judgment: Option 2 seems more "representative" of Linda from the description of her, even though it is clearly mathematically less likely. In other demonstrations, they argued that a specific scenario seemed more likely because of representativeness, but each added detail would actually make the scenario less and less likely. In this way it could be similar to the
misleading vividness fallacy. More recently, Kahneman has argued that the conjunction fallacy is a type of
extension neglect. ==Joint versus separate evaluation==