18 II. InfiniteProbabilityFields
actualrandomevents,the extendedfield
ofprobability (B%, P)
willstill remainmerelyamathematical
structure.
Thus setsof
B%
are
generallymerelyideal eventstowhich
nothingcorrespondsin
theoutsideworld.However,ifreasoning
which
utilizestheprobabilitiesofsuchidealeventsleadsustoa
determinationofthe probabilityof anactual eventof
g,
then,
from an empirical point of view also, this determination will
automaticallyfailtobecontradictory.
§
- ExamplesofInfiniteFieldsofProbability
I. In
§
1 of thefirst chapter, wehave constructed various
finiteprobabilityfields.
Letnow
E
=
{£x
,
£ 2
>•••>
ln»
- •}
bea
countable
set,andlet
5
coincidewiththeaggregateofthesubsetsofE.
Allpossibleprobability fieldswithsuchanaggregate
5
are
obtainedinthefollowingmanner:
We
take
a
sequenceofnon-negativenumbers
p„,
suchthat
Pi+Vi+
...
+
Vn
+•••
= 1
andforeachsetAput
P(A) -
2'fin,
n
wherethesummation
2'
extendstoalltheindicesn for
which
$n
belongs toA. Thesefields ofprobabilityareobviously Borel
fields.
II. In thisexample, weshallassumethat E represents the
realnumber
axis. Atfirst,let
g
beformedof
allpossiblefinite
sums of half-open intervals [a; b)
— {a£.tj<b}
(taking into
considerationnotonlytheproperintervals,withfiniteaandb,
butalsotheimproper intervals [-
<x>
;
a), [a,-+ oo) and [-o©j
4-oo
)
).
g
isthenafield.Bymeansoftheextensiontheorem,how-
ever, eachfieldofprobabilityon
5
canbeextendedtoasimilar
field onB%. The system
of sets
B% is, therefore, in our case
nothingbutthesystemofall
Borelpointsets on
a
line. Letus
turnnowtothefollowingcase.
III. AgainsupposeEtobetherealnumber
axis,while
g
is
composedofallBorelpointsetsofthisline.Inordertoconstruct
a field of probability with thegiven field
gf,
it is sufficientto
defineanarbitrarynon-negativecompletelyadditiveset-function