The first way to think about probability is as a measure of the frequency of an event: if I say that the probability of a coin to land heads up is 50% I may mean that, if I flip the coin say 100 times, on average I will get heads 50 times. This is not going to get us out of Hume’s problem, because probabilities interpreted as frequencies of events are, again, a form of induction
1More
4More
Rationally Speaking: The very foundations of science - 0 views
1More
TPM: The Philosophers' Magazine | Philosophy as complementary science - 1 views
3More
Sociology and History: Shapin on the Merton Thesis « Ether Wave Propaganda - 1 views
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20▼ items per page