Philosophy of probability

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The philosophy of probability presents problems chiefly in matters of epistemology and the uneasy interface between mathematical concepts and ordinary language as it is used by non-mathematicians.

Probability theory is an established field of study in mathematics. It has its origins in correspondence discussing the mathematics of games of chance between Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat in the seventeenth century, and was formalized and rendered axiomatic as a distinct branch of mathematics by Andrey Kolmogorov in the twentieth century. In its axiomatic form, mathematical statements about probability theory carry the same sort of epistemological confidence shared by other mathematical statements in the philosophy of mathematics.[1]

The mathematical analysis originated in observations of the behaviour of game equipment such as playing cards and dice, which are designed specifically to introduce random and equalized elements; in mathematical terms, they are subjects of indifference. This is not the only way probabilistic statements are used in ordinary human language: when people say that "it will probably rain", they typically do not mean that the outcome of rain versus not-rain is a random factor that the odds currently favor; instead, such statements are perhaps better understood as qualifying their expectation of rain with a degree of confidence. Likewise, when it is written that "the most probable explanation" of the name of Ludlow, Massachusetts "is that it was named after Roger Ludlow", what is meant here is not that Roger Ludlow is favored by a random factor, but rather that this is the most plausible explanation of the evidence, which admits other, less likely explanations.

Thomas Bayes attempted to provide a logic that could handle varying degrees of confidence; as such, Bayesian probability is an attempt to recast the representation of probabilistic statements as an expression of the degree of confidence by which the beliefs they express are held.

Though probability initially may have had lowly motivations, its modern influence and use is wide-spread ranging from medicine, through practical pursuits, all the way to the higher-order and the sublime.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Laszlo E. Szabo, A Physicalist Interpretation of Probability (Talk presented on the Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös, Budapest, 8 October 2001.)

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[edit] Further reading

  • Cohen, L. J. An Introduction to the Philosophy of Induction and Probability. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.
  • Gillies, Donald. Philosophical Theories of Probability. London: Routledge, 2000.
  • Jackson, Frank, and Robert Pargetter. "Physical Probability as a Propensity." Noûs, Vol. 16, No. 4 (Nov. 1982), pp. 567-583.
  • Lewis, David. Philosophical Papers. Vol. II. Oxford: Oxford U. P, 1986.