LOL I said the whole question wrong. I tried to do it from memory. I am typing up the correct question now.
The real question is much harder:
Let h(x,x') = Integral(p(x|y)*p(y|x')dy.
Let p0(x) be a random approximation of p(x). (p0(x) can be any function)
Let pi+1(x) be integral(h(x,x')*pi(x')dx'
x' is a dummy argument.
Provided the joint density p(x,y) over the domain X,Y.
Prove that sequence {pi(x)} converges monotonically to p(x).

So maybe it isn't grade school level math.
So maybe I am lying about it being for my cousin too.
The real question is much harder:
Let h(x,x') = Integral(p(x|y)*p(y|x')dy.
Let p0(x) be a random approximation of p(x). (p0(x) can be any function)
Let pi+1(x) be integral(h(x,x')*pi(x')dx'
x' is a dummy argument.
Provided the joint density p(x,y) over the domain X,Y.
Prove that sequence {pi(x)} converges monotonically to p(x).
So maybe it isn't grade school level math.
So maybe I am lying about it being for my cousin too.
