Foundations of the theory of probability

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§


  1. 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).

§


  1. NotesonTerminology


We have defined the
objects of our future study, random

events,
assets.However, inthetheoryofprobabilitymanyset-

theoreticconceptsaredesignatedbyotherterms. Weshallgive

hereabrieflistofsuchconcepts.

Theory
of

Sets
Random

Events


  1. AandBdonotintersect,

    1. Events A andBare




in-

i.e.,AB



  1. compatible.

  2. AB..


.2V~=




    1. EventsA,B,...,2Vare




incompatible.


  1. AB...N


=
X.


  1. EventXis


defined
as

the

simultaneous

occurrence of

eventsA,B,...,N.


  1. A4-B






..
.+

N=X.


  1. EventXisdefinedas


the

occurrence of atleast oneof

theevents

A,B,...,N.

8

Cf.§4,Formula (3).
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