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Historical records show that there was no real concept of probability in Europe before the mid-seventeenth century although the use of dice and other randomizing objects was commonplace. Ian Hacking here presents a philosophical critique of early ideas about probability, induction and statistical inference and the growth of this new family of ideas in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The contemporary debate centres round such figures as Pascal, Leibniz and Jacques Bernoulli. What brought about the change in ideas? The author invokes in his explanation a wider intellectual framework involving the growth of science, economics and the theology of the period.
209 pages, Hardcover
Published April 25, 1975
I once found an original oil painting of a notable Elizabethan courtier in my college brewhouse, and was able to hang him on my wall. I looked him up and found that he had served as a senior civil servant in a succession of turbulent and contradictory reigns, now catholic, now not, each given to executing its predecessors.
'How could he do this?', I asked a conservative young historian.
'How could human society survive without such men?', he replied.
A parable: there have to be continuities or else everything will fall apart.
In this final chapter the author applies numerical measures to probability. One 'contingent event' in question is the winning of a game where each of ten players risks one coin for an even chance of getting ten back. Loss is neuf fois plus probable than gain. There are 'nine degrees of probability of losing a coin for only one of gaining nine'. These are the first occasions in print where probability, so called, is measured.
Hacking investigates the early history of ideas concerning probability and inference from statistical data.