§
- NotesonTerminology 5
Remark 1. Iftwo separate statementsare eachpractically
reliable,thenwemaysaythatsimultaneouslytheyareboth
reli-
able,
althoughthedegreeofreliabilityissomewhatloweredinthe
process.If,however,thenumberofsuchstatementsisverylarge,
thenfrom
the
practicalreliabilityofeach,onecannotdeduceany-
thing
about
thesimultaneouscorrectnessofallofthem.Therefore
fromthe
principle
statedin(a)
it
does
notfollow
that
in
a
very
largenumberofseries
of
ntestseach,
ineachtheratiom/nwill
differonlyslightlyfromP(A).
Remark 2. To an impossible event (an empty set) corre-
sponds,inaccordancewithouraxioms,theprobabilityP(0)
=
5
,
buttheconverse isnottrue: P(A) =0doesnotimplytheim-
possibilityofA.WhenP(A)
—
0,
fromprinciple (b)allwecan
assertisthatwhentheconditions
©
arerealizedbutonce,event
Aispracticallyimpossible.Itdoesnotatallassert,however,that
inasufficientlylongseriesofteststheeventAwillnot
occur.On
theotherhand,onecandeducefromthe
principle
(a)
merelythat
whenP(A)
=
andnisverylarge,theratio m/nwillbevery
small (itmight,forexample,beequalto1/n).
§
- NotesonTerminology
We have defined the
objects of our future study, random
events,
assets.However, inthetheoryofprobabilitymanyset-
theoreticconceptsaredesignatedbyotherterms. Weshallgive
hereabrieflistofsuchconcepts.
Theory
of
Sets
Random
Events
- AandBdonotintersect,
- Events A andBare
in-
i.e.,AB
—
- compatible.
- AB..
.2V~=
- EventsA,B,...,2Vare
incompatible.
- AB...N
=
X.
- EventXis
defined
as
the
simultaneous
occurrence of
eventsA,B,...,N.
- A4-B
..
.+
N=X.
- EventXisdefinedas
the
occurrence of atleast oneof
theevents
A,B,...,N.
8
Cf.§4,Formula (3).