The objective and the subjective in mid-nineteenth-century British probability theory
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Publication:891755
DOI10.1016/j.hm.2015.01.003zbMath1329.01032OpenAlexW2054363473MaRDI QIDQ891755
Publication date: 17 November 2015
Published in: Historia Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hm.2015.01.003
inductive logicsubjective probabilitysyllogistic logicobjective probabilitynineteenth-century probability theory
Foundations and philosophical topics in statistics (62A01) Foundations of probability theory (60A99) History of mathematics in the 19th century (01A55) History of probability theory (60-03)
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Cites Work
- Robert Leslie Ellis's work on philosophy of science and the foundations of probability theory
- A history of the central limit theorem. From classical to modern probability theory
- A history of parametric statistical inference from Bernoulli to Fisher, 1713--1935
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- The significance of Jacob Bernoulli's \textit{Ars Conjectandi} for the philosophy of probability today
- Laplace's theory of errors
- A history of inverse probability. From Thomas Bayes to Karl Pearson.
- How probabilities came to be objective and subjective
- French logique and British logic: on the origins of Augustus De Morgan's early logical inquiries, 1805--1835.
- Remarks on the idealist and empiricist interpretation of frequentism: Robert Leslie Ellis versus John Venn
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- Equipossibility Theories of Probability
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- 19th Century Logic Between Philosophy and Mathematics
- John Venn's Hypothetical Infinite Frequentism and Logic
- Jacques Bernoulli's Art of Conjecturing
- Classical Probability in the Enlightenment, New Edition
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