Ebook: Ten Great Ideas about Chance
Author: Persi Diaconis Brian Skyrms
- Tags: Probability & Statistics, Applied, Mathematics, Science & Math, History, Mathematics, Science & Math, Statistics, Mathematics, Science & Mathematics, New Used & Rental Textbooks, Specialty Boutique
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Persi Diaconis and Brian Skyrms begin with Gerolamo Cardano, a sixteenth-century physician, mathematician, and professional gambler who helped develop the idea that chance actually can be measured. They describe how later thinkers showed how the judgment of chance also can be measured, how frequency is related to chance, and how chance, judgment, and frequency could be unified. Diaconis and Skyrms explain how Thomas Bayes laid the foundation of modern statistics, and they explore David Hume’s problem of induction, Andrey Kolmogorov’s general mathematical framework for probability, the application of computability to chance, and why chance is essential to modern physics. A final idea―that we are psychologically predisposed to error when judging chance―is taken up through the work of Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky.
Complete with a brief probability refresher, Ten Great Ideas about Chance is certain to be a hit with anyone who wants to understand the secrets of probability and how they were discovered.