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Probability interpretations

The word probability has been used in a variety of ways since it was first applied to the mathematical study of games of chance. Does probability measure the real, physical, tendency of something to occur, or is it a measure of how strongly one believes it will occur, or does it draw on both these elements? In answering such questions, mathematicians interpret the probability values of probability theory.

There are two broad categories[1][2] of probability interpretations which can be called "physical" and "evidential" probabilities. Physical probabilities, which are also called objective or frequency probabilities, are associated with random physical systems such as roulette wheels, rolling dice and radioactive atoms. In such systems, a given type of event (such as a die yielding a six) tends to occur at a persistent rate, or "relative frequency", in a long run of trials. Physical probabilities either explain, or are invoked to explain, these stable frequencies. The two main kinds of theory of physical probability are frequentist accounts (such as those of Venn,[3] Reichenbach[4] and von Mises)[5] and propensity accounts (such as those of Popper, Miller, Giere and Fetzer).[6]

Evidential probability, also called Bayesian probability, can be assigned to any statement whatsoever, even when no random process is involved, as a way to represent its subjective plausibility, or the degree to which the statement is supported by the available evidence. On most accounts, evidential probabilities are considered to be degrees of belief, defined in terms of dispositions to gamble at certain odds. The four main evidential interpretations are the classical (e.g. Laplace's)[7] interpretation, the subjective interpretation (de Finetti[8] and Savage),[9] the epistemic or inductive interpretation (Ramsey,[10] Cox)[11] and the logical interpretation (Keynes[12] and Carnap).[13] There are also evidential interpretations of probability covering groups, which are often labelled as 'intersubjective' (proposed by Gillies[14] and Rowbottom).[6]

Some interpretations of probability are associated with approaches to statistical inference, including theories of estimation and hypothesis testing. The physical interpretation, for example, is taken by followers of "frequentist" statistical methods, such as Ronald Fisher[dubious ], Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson. Statisticians of the opposing Bayesian school typically accept the frequency interpretation when it makes sense (although not as a definition), but there's less agreement regarding physical probabilities. Bayesians consider the calculation of evidential probabilities to be both valid and necessary in statistics. This article, however, focuses on the interpretations of probability rather than theories of statistical inference.

The terminology of this topic is rather confusing, in part because probabilities are studied within a variety of academic fields. The word "frequentist" is especially tricky. To philosophers it refers to a particular theory of physical probability, one that has more or less been abandoned. To scientists, on the other hand, "frequentist probability" is just another name for physical (or objective) probability. Those who promote Bayesian inference view "frequentist statistics" as an approach to statistical inference that is based on the frequency interpretation of probability, usually relying on the law of large numbers and characterized by what is called 'Null Hypothesis Significance Testing' (NHST). Also the word "objective", as applied to probability, sometimes means exactly what "physical" means here, but is also used of evidential probabilities that are fixed by rational constraints, such as logical and epistemic probabilities.

It is unanimously agreed that statistics depends somehow on probability. But, as to what probability is and how it is connected with statistics, there has seldom been such complete disagreement and breakdown of communication since the Tower of Babel. Doubtless, much of the disagreement is merely terminological and would disappear under sufficiently sharp analysis.

— (Savage, 1954, p 2)[9]

Philosophy

The philosophy of probability presents problems chiefly in matters of epistemology and the uneasy interface between mathematical concepts and ordinary language as it is used by non-mathematicians. Probability theory is an established field of study in mathematics. It has its origins in correspondence discussing the mathematics of games of chance between Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat in the seventeenth century,[15] and was formalized and rendered axiomatic as a distinct branch of mathematics by Andrey Kolmogorov in the twentieth century. In axiomatic form, mathematical statements about probability theory carry the same sort of epistemological confidence within the philosophy of mathematics as are shared by other mathematical statements.[16][17]

The mathematical analysis originated in observations of the behaviour of game equipment such as playing cards and dice, which are designed specifically to introduce random and equalized elements; in mathematical terms, they are subjects of indifference. This is not the only way probabilistic statements are used in ordinary human language: when people say that "it will probably rain", they typically do not mean that the outcome of rain versus not-rain is a random factor that the odds currently favor; instead, such statements are perhaps better understood as qualifying their expectation of rain with a degree of confidence. Likewise, when it is written that "the most probable explanation" of the name of Ludlow, Massachusetts "is that it was named after Roger Ludlow", what is meant here is not that Roger Ludlow is favored by a random factor, but rather that this is the most plausible explanation of the evidence, which admits other, less likely explanations.

Thomas Bayes attempted to provide a logic that could handle varying degrees of confidence; as such, Bayesian probability is an attempt to recast the representation of probabilistic statements as an expression of the degree of confidence by which the beliefs they express are held.

Though probability initially had somewhat mundane motivations, its modern influence and use is widespread ranging from evidence-based medicine, through six sigma, all the way to the probabilistically checkable proof and the string theory landscape.

A summary of some interpretations of probability [2]
Classical Frequentist Subjective Propensity
Main hypothesis Principle of indifference Frequency of occurrence Degree of belief Degree of causal connection
Conceptual basis Hypothetical symmetry Past data and reference class Knowledge and intuition Present state of system
Conceptual approach Conjectural Empirical Subjective Metaphysical
Single case possible Yes No Yes Yes
Precise Yes No No Yes
Problems Ambiguity in principle of indifference Circular definition Reference class problem Disputed concept

Classical definition

The first attempt at mathematical rigour in the field of probability, championed by Pierre-Simon Laplace, is now known as the classical definition. Developed from studies of games of chance (such as rolling dice) it states that probability is shared equally between all the possible outcomes, provided these outcomes can be deemed equally likely.[1] (3.1)

The theory of chance consists in reducing all the events of the same kind to a certain number of cases equally possible, that is to say, to such as we may be equally undecided about in regard to their existence, and in determining the number of cases favorable to the event whose probability is sought. The ratio of this number to that of all the cases possible is the measure of this probability, which is thus simply a fraction whose numerator is the number of favorable cases and whose denominator is the number of all the cases possible.

— Pierre-Simon Laplace, A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities[7]
 
The classical definition of probability works well for situations with only a finite number of equally-likely outcomes.

This can be represented mathematically as follows: If a random experiment can result in N mutually exclusive and equally likely outcomes and if NA of these outcomes result in the occurrence of the event A, the probability of A is defined by

 

There are two clear limitations to the classical definition.[18] Firstly, it is applicable only to situations in which there is only a 'finite' number of possible outcomes. But some important random experiments, such as tossing a coin until it shows heads, give rise to an infinite set of outcomes. And secondly, it requires an a priori determination that all possible outcomes are equally likely without falling in a trap of circular reasoning by relying on the notion of probability. (In using the terminology "we may be equally undecided", Laplace assumed, by what has been called the "principle of insufficient reason", that all possible outcomes are equally likely if there is no known reason to assume otherwise, for which there is no obvious justification.[19][20])

Frequentism

 
For frequentists, the probability of the ball landing in any pocket can be determined only by repeated trials in which the observed result converges to the underlying probability in the long run.

Frequentists posit that the probability of an event is its relative frequency over time,[1] (3.4) i.e., its relative frequency of occurrence after repeating a process a large number of times under similar conditions. This is also known as aleatory probability. The events are assumed to be governed by some random physical phenomena, which are either phenomena that are predictable, in principle, with sufficient information (see determinism); or phenomena which are essentially unpredictable. Examples of the first kind include tossing dice or spinning a roulette wheel; an example of the second kind is radioactive decay. In the case of tossing a fair coin, frequentists say that the probability of getting a heads is 1/2, not because there are two equally likely outcomes but because repeated series of large numbers of trials demonstrate that the empirical frequency converges to the limit 1/2 as the number of trials goes to infinity.

If we denote by   the number of occurrences of an event   in   trials, then if   we say that  .

The frequentist view has its own problems. It is of course impossible to actually perform an infinity of repetitions of a random experiment to determine the probability of an event. But if only a finite number of repetitions of the process are performed, different relative frequencies will appear in different series of trials. If these relative frequencies are to define the probability, the probability will be slightly different every time it is measured. But the real probability should be the same every time. If we acknowledge the fact that we only can measure a probability with some error of measurement attached, we still get into problems as the error of measurement can only be expressed as a probability, the very concept we are trying to define. This renders even the frequency definition circular; see for example “What is the Chance of an Earthquake?”[21]

Subjectivism

Subjectivists, also known as Bayesians or followers of epistemic probability, give the notion of probability a subjective status by regarding it as a measure of the 'degree of belief' of the individual assessing the uncertainty of a particular situation. Epistemic or subjective probability is sometimes called credence, as opposed to the term chance for a propensity probability. Some examples of epistemic probability are to assign a probability to the proposition that a proposed law of physics is true or to determine how probable it is that a suspect committed a crime, based on the evidence presented. The use of Bayesian probability raises the philosophical debate as to whether it can contribute valid justifications of belief. Bayesians point to the work of Ramsey[10] (p 182) and de Finetti[8] (p 103) as proving that subjective beliefs must follow the laws of probability if they are to be coherent.[22] Evidence casts doubt that humans will have coherent beliefs.[23][24] The use of Bayesian probability involves specifying a prior probability. This may be obtained from consideration of whether the required prior probability is greater or lesser than a reference probability[clarification needed] associated with an urn model or a thought experiment. The issue is that for a given problem, multiple thought experiments could apply, and choosing one is a matter of judgement: different people may assign different prior probabilities, known as the reference class problem. The "sunrise problem" provides an example.

Propensity

Propensity theorists think of probability as a physical propensity, or disposition, or tendency of a given type of physical situation to yield an outcome of a certain kind or to yield a long run relative frequency of such an outcome.[25] This kind of objective probability is sometimes called 'chance'.

Propensities, or chances, are not relative frequencies, but purported causes of the observed stable relative frequencies. Propensities are invoked to explain why repeating a certain kind of experiment will generate given outcome types at persistent rates, which are known as propensities or chances. Frequentists are unable to take this approach, since relative frequencies do not exist for single tosses of a coin, but only for large ensembles or collectives (see "single case possible" in the table above).[2] In contrast, a propensitist is able to use the law of large numbers to explain the behaviour of long-run frequencies. This law, which is a consequence of the axioms of probability, says that if (for example) a coin is tossed repeatedly many times, in such a way that its probability of landing heads is the same on each toss, and the outcomes are probabilistically independent, then the relative frequency of heads will be close to the probability of heads on each single toss. This law allows that stable long-run frequencies are a manifestation of invariant single-case probabilities. In addition to explaining the emergence of stable relative frequencies, the idea of propensity is motivated by the desire to make sense of single-case probability attributions in quantum mechanics, such as the probability of decay of a particular atom at a particular time.

The main challenge facing propensity theories is to say exactly what propensity means. (And then, of course, to show that propensity thus defined has the required properties.) At present, unfortunately, none of the well-recognised accounts of propensity comes close to meeting this challenge.

A propensity theory of probability was given by Charles Sanders Peirce.[26][27][28][29] A later propensity theory was proposed by philosopher Karl Popper, who had only slight acquaintance with the writings of C. S. Peirce, however.[26][27] Popper noted that the outcome of a physical experiment is produced by a certain set of "generating conditions". When we repeat an experiment, as the saying goes, we really perform another experiment with a (more or less) similar set of generating conditions. To say that a set of generating conditions has propensity p of producing the outcome E means that those exact conditions, if repeated indefinitely, would produce an outcome sequence in which E occurred with limiting relative frequency p. For Popper then, a deterministic experiment would have propensity 0 or 1 for each outcome, since those generating conditions would have same outcome on each trial. In other words, non-trivial propensities (those that differ from 0 and 1) only exist for genuinely nondeterministic experiments.

A number of other philosophers, including David Miller and Donald A. Gillies, have proposed propensity theories somewhat similar to Popper's.

Other propensity theorists (e.g. Ronald Giere[30]) do not explicitly define propensities at all, but rather see propensity as defined by the theoretical role it plays in science. They argued, for example, that physical magnitudes such as electrical charge cannot be explicitly defined either, in terms of more basic things, but only in terms of what they do (such as attracting and repelling other electrical charges). In a similar way, propensity is whatever fills the various roles that physical probability plays in science.

What roles does physical probability play in science? What are its properties? One central property of chance is that, when known, it constrains rational belief to take the same numerical value. David Lewis called this the Principal Principle,[1] (3.3 & 3.5) a term that philosophers have mostly adopted. For example, suppose you are certain that a particular biased coin has propensity 0.32 to land heads every time it is tossed. What is then the correct price for a gamble that pays $1 if the coin lands heads, and nothing otherwise? According to the Principal Principle, the fair price is 32 cents.

Logical, epistemic, and inductive probability

It is widely recognized that the term "probability" is sometimes used in contexts where it has nothing to do with physical randomness. Consider, for example, the claim that the extinction of the dinosaurs was probably caused by a large meteorite hitting the earth. Statements such as "Hypothesis H is probably true" have been interpreted to mean that the (presently available) empirical evidence (E, say) supports H to a high degree. This degree of support of H by E has been called the logical, or epistemic, or inductive probability of H given E.

The differences between these interpretations are rather small, and may seem inconsequential. One of the main points of disagreement lies in the relation between probability and belief. Logical probabilities are conceived (for example in Keynes' Treatise on Probability[12]) to be objective, logical relations between propositions (or sentences), and hence not to depend in any way upon belief. They are degrees of (partial) entailment, or degrees of logical consequence, not degrees of belief. (They do, nevertheless, dictate proper degrees of belief, as is discussed below.) Frank P. Ramsey, on the other hand, was skeptical about the existence of such objective logical relations and argued that (evidential) probability is "the logic of partial belief".[10] (p 157) In other words, Ramsey held that epistemic probabilities simply are degrees of rational belief, rather than being logical relations that merely constrain degrees of rational belief.

Another point of disagreement concerns the uniqueness of evidential probability, relative to a given state of knowledge. Rudolf Carnap held, for example, that logical principles always determine a unique logical probability for any statement, relative to any body of evidence. Ramsey, by contrast, thought that while degrees of belief are subject to some rational constraints (such as, but not limited to, the axioms of probability) these constraints usually do not determine a unique value. Rational people, in other words, may differ somewhat in their degrees of belief, even if they all have the same information.

Prediction

An alternative account of probability emphasizes the role of prediction – predicting future observations on the basis of past observations, not on unobservable parameters. In its modern form, it is mainly in the Bayesian vein. This was the main function of probability before the 20th century,[31] but fell out of favor compared to the parametric approach, which modeled phenomena as a physical system that was observed with error, such as in celestial mechanics.

The modern predictive approach was pioneered by Bruno de Finetti, with the central idea of exchangeability – that future observations should behave like past observations.[31] This view came to the attention of the Anglophone world with the 1974 translation of de Finetti's book,[31] and has since been propounded by such statisticians as Seymour Geisser.

Axiomatic probability

The mathematics of probability can be developed on an entirely axiomatic basis that is independent of any interpretation: see the articles on probability theory and probability axioms for a detailed treatment.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hájek, Alan (21 October 2002), Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), Interpretations of Probability, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The taxonomy of probability interpretations given here is similar to that of the longer and more complete Interpretations of Probability article in the online Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. References to that article include a parenthetic section number where appropriate. A partial outline of that article:
    • Section 2: Criteria of adequacy for the interpretations of probability
    • Section 3:
      • 3.1 Classical Probability
      • 3.2 Logical Probability
      • 3.3 Subjective Probability
      • 3.4 Frequency Interpretations
      • 3.5 Propensity Interpretations
  2. ^ a b c de Elía, Ramón; Laprise, René (2005). "Diversity in interpretations of probability: implications for weather forecasting". Monthly Weather Review. 133 (5): 1129–1143. Bibcode:2005MWRv..133.1129D. doi:10.1175/mwr2913.1. S2CID 123135127. "There are several schools of thought regarding the interpretation of probabilities, none of them without flaws, internal contradictions, or paradoxes." (p 1129) "There are no standard classifications of probability interpretations, and even the more popular ones may suffer subtle variations from text to text." (p 1130) The classification in this article is representative, as are the authors and ideas claimed for each classification.
  3. ^ Venn, John (1876). The Logic of Chance. London: MacMillan.
  4. ^ Reichenbach, Hans (1948). The theory of probability, an inquiry into the logical and mathematical foundations of the calculus of probability. University of California Press. English translation of the original 1935 German. ASIN: B000R0D5MS
  5. ^ Mises, Richard (1981). Probability, statistics, and truth. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-24214-9. English translation of the third German edition of 1951 which was published 30 years after the first German edition.
  6. ^ a b Rowbottom, Darrell (2015). Probability. Cambridge: Polity. ISBN 978-0745652573.
  7. ^ a b Laplace, P. S., 1814, English edition 1951, A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities, New York: Dover Publications Inc.
  8. ^ a b de Finetti, Bruno (1964). "Foresight: its Logical laws, its Subjective Sources". In Kyburg, H. E. (ed.). Studies in Subjective Probability. H. E. Smokler. New York: Wiley. pp. 93–158. Translation of the 1937 French original with later notes added.
  9. ^ a b Savage, L.J. (1954). The foundations of statistics. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-62349-8.
  10. ^ a b c Ramsey, F. P. (1931). "Chapter VII, Truth and Probability (1926)" (PDF). In Braithwaite, R. B. (ed.). Foundations of Mathematics and Other Logical Essays. London: Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. pp. 156–198. Retrieved 15 August 2013. Contains three chapters (essays) by Ramsey. The electronic version contains only those three.
  11. ^ Cox, Richard Threlkeld (1961). The algebra of probable inference. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press.
  12. ^ a b Keynes, John Maynard (1921). A Treatise on Probability. MacMillan. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
  13. ^ Carnap, Rudolph (1950). Logical Foundations of Probability. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Carnap coined the notion "probability1" and "probability2" for evidential and physical probability, respectively.
  14. ^ Gillies, Donald (2000). Philosophical theories of probability. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415182768.
  15. ^ Fermat and Pascal on Probability (@ socsci.uci.edu)
  16. ^ Laszlo E. Szabo, A Physicalist Interpretation of Probability 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine (Talk presented on the Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös, Budapest, 8 October 2001.)
  17. ^ Laszlo E. Szabo, Objective probability-like things with and without objective indeterminism, Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 38 (2007) 626–634 (Preprint)
  18. ^ Spanos, Aris (1986). Statistical foundations of econometric modelling. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521269124.
  19. ^ Simon French; John Maule; Nadia Papamichail (2009). Decision Behaviour, Analysis and Support. Cambridge University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-139-48098-7.
  20. ^ Nils-Eric Sahlin (2013). "2. On Higher Order Beliefs". In J. P. Dubucs (ed.). Philosophy of Probability. Springer. p. 30. ISBN 978-94-015-8208-7.
  21. ^ Freedman, David and Philip B. Stark (2003)"What is the Chance of an Earthquake?" Earthquake Science and Seismic Risk.
  22. ^ Jaynes, E. T. (2003). Probability theory the logic of science. Cambridge, UK New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521592710.
  23. ^ Kahneman, Daniel (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374275631. The book contains numerous examples of the difference between idealized and actual thought. "[W]hen called upon to judge probability, people actually judge something else and believe they have judged probability." (p 98)
  24. ^ Grove, William M.; Meehl, Paul E. (1996). (PDF). Psychology, Public Policy, and Law. 2 (2): 293–332. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.471.592. doi:10.1037/1076-8971.2.2.293. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 October 2011. Statistical decisions are consistently superior to the subjective decisions of experts.
  25. ^ Peterson, Martin (2009). An introduction to decision theory. Cambridge, UK New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-0521716543.
  26. ^ a b Miller, Richard W. (1975). "Propensity: Popper or Peirce?". British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 26 (2): 123–132. doi:10.1093/bjps/26.2.123.
  27. ^ a b Haack, Susan; Kolenda, Konstantin, Konstantin; Kolenda (1977). "Two Fallibilists in Search of the Truth". Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. 51 (Supplementary Volumes): 63–104. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/51.1.63. JSTOR 4106816.
  28. ^ Burks, Arthur W. (1978). Chance, Cause and Reason: An Inquiry into the Nature of Scientific Evidence. University of Chicago Press. pp. 694 pages. ISBN 978-0-226-08087-1.
  29. ^ Peirce, Charles Sanders and Burks, Arthur W., ed. (1958), the Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce Volumes 7 and 8, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, also Belnap Press (of Harvard University Press) edition, vols. 7-8 bound together, 798 pages, online via InteLex, reprinted in 1998 Thoemmes Continuum.
  30. ^ Ronald N. Giere (1973). "Objective Single Case Probabilities and the Foundations of Statistics". Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics. Vol. 73. Elsevier. pp. 467–483. doi:10.1016/S0049-237X(09)70380-5. ISBN 978-0-444-10491-5.
  31. ^ a b c Geisser, Seymour (1993). Predictive Inference. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-412-03471-8.

Further reading

  • Cohen, L (1989). An introduction to the philosophy of induction and probability. Oxford New York: Clarendon Press Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198750789.
  • Eagle, Antony (2011). Philosophy of probability : contemporary readings. Abingdon, Oxon New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415483872.
  • Gillies, Donald (2000). Philosophical theories of probability. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415182768. A comprehensive monograph covering the four principal current interpretations: logical, subjective, frequency, propensity. Also proposes a novel intersubective interpretation.
  • Hacking, Ian (2006). The emergence of probability : a philosophical study of early ideas about probability, induction and statistical inference. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521685573.
  • Paul Humphreys, ed. (1994) Patrick Suppes: Scientific Philosopher, Synthese Library, Springer-Verlag.
    • Vol. 1: Probability and Probabilistic Causality.
    • Vol. 2: Philosophy of Physics, Theory Structure and Measurement, and Action Theory.
  • Jackson, Frank, and Robert Pargetter (1982) "Physical Probability as a Propensity," Noûs 16(4): 567–583.
  • Khrennikov, Andrei (2009). Interpretations of probability (2nd ed.). Berlin New York: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110207484. Covers mostly non-Kolmogorov probability models, particularly with respect to quantum physics.
  • Lewis, David (1983). Philosophical papers. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195036466.
  • Plato, Jan von (1994). Creating modern probability : its mathematics, physics, and philosophy in historical perspective. Cambridge England New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521597357.
  • Rowbottom, Darrell (2015). Probability. Cambridge: Polity. ISBN 978-0745652573. A highly accessible introduction to the interpretation of probability. Covers all the main interpretations, and proposes a novel group level (or 'intersubjective') interpretation. Also covers fallacies and applications of interpretations in the social and natural sciences.
  • Skyrms, Brian (2000). Choice and chance : an introduction to inductive logic. Australia Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning. ISBN 978-0534557379.

External links

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Probability interpretations news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The word probability has been used in a variety of ways since it was first applied to the mathematical study of games of chance Does probability measure the real physical tendency of something to occur or is it a measure of how strongly one believes it will occur or does it draw on both these elements In answering such questions mathematicians interpret the probability values of probability theory There are two broad categories 1 2 of probability interpretations which can be called physical and evidential probabilities Physical probabilities which are also called objective or frequency probabilities are associated with random physical systems such as roulette wheels rolling dice and radioactive atoms In such systems a given type of event such as a die yielding a six tends to occur at a persistent rate or relative frequency in a long run of trials Physical probabilities either explain or are invoked to explain these stable frequencies The two main kinds of theory of physical probability are frequentist accounts such as those of Venn 3 Reichenbach 4 and von Mises 5 and propensity accounts such as those of Popper Miller Giere and Fetzer 6 Evidential probability also called Bayesian probability can be assigned to any statement whatsoever even when no random process is involved as a way to represent its subjective plausibility or the degree to which the statement is supported by the available evidence On most accounts evidential probabilities are considered to be degrees of belief defined in terms of dispositions to gamble at certain odds The four main evidential interpretations are the classical e g Laplace s 7 interpretation the subjective interpretation de Finetti 8 and Savage 9 the epistemic or inductive interpretation Ramsey 10 Cox 11 and the logical interpretation Keynes 12 and Carnap 13 There are also evidential interpretations of probability covering groups which are often labelled as intersubjective proposed by Gillies 14 and Rowbottom 6 Some interpretations of probability are associated with approaches to statistical inference including theories of estimation and hypothesis testing The physical interpretation for example is taken by followers of frequentist statistical methods such as Ronald Fisher dubious discuss Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson Statisticians of the opposing Bayesian school typically accept the frequency interpretation when it makes sense although not as a definition but there s less agreement regarding physical probabilities Bayesians consider the calculation of evidential probabilities to be both valid and necessary in statistics This article however focuses on the interpretations of probability rather than theories of statistical inference The terminology of this topic is rather confusing in part because probabilities are studied within a variety of academic fields The word frequentist is especially tricky To philosophers it refers to a particular theory of physical probability one that has more or less been abandoned To scientists on the other hand frequentist probability is just another name for physical or objective probability Those who promote Bayesian inference view frequentist statistics as an approach to statistical inference that is based on the frequency interpretation of probability usually relying on the law of large numbers and characterized by what is called Null Hypothesis Significance Testing NHST Also the word objective as applied to probability sometimes means exactly what physical means here but is also used of evidential probabilities that are fixed by rational constraints such as logical and epistemic probabilities It is unanimously agreed that statistics depends somehow on probability But as to what probability is and how it is connected with statistics there has seldom been such complete disagreement and breakdown of communication since the Tower of Babel Doubtless much of the disagreement is merely terminological and would disappear under sufficiently sharp analysis Savage 1954 p 2 9 Contents 1 Philosophy 2 Classical definition 3 Frequentism 4 Subjectivism 5 Propensity 6 Logical epistemic and inductive probability 7 Prediction 8 Axiomatic probability 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksPhilosophy EditThe philosophy of probability presents problems chiefly in matters of epistemology and the uneasy interface between mathematical concepts and ordinary language as it is used by non mathematicians Probability theory is an established field of study in mathematics It has its origins in correspondence discussing the mathematics of games of chance between Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat in the seventeenth century 15 and was formalized and rendered axiomatic as a distinct branch of mathematics by Andrey Kolmogorov in the twentieth century In axiomatic form mathematical statements about probability theory carry the same sort of epistemological confidence within the philosophy of mathematics as are shared by other mathematical statements 16 17 The mathematical analysis originated in observations of the behaviour of game equipment such as playing cards and dice which are designed specifically to introduce random and equalized elements in mathematical terms they are subjects of indifference This is not the only way probabilistic statements are used in ordinary human language when people say that it will probably rain they typically do not mean that the outcome of rain versus not rain is a random factor that the odds currently favor instead such statements are perhaps better understood as qualifying their expectation of rain with a degree of confidence Likewise when it is written that the most probable explanation of the name of Ludlow Massachusetts is that it was named after Roger Ludlow what is meant here is not that Roger Ludlow is favored by a random factor but rather that this is the most plausible explanation of the evidence which admits other less likely explanations Thomas Bayes attempted to provide a logic that could handle varying degrees of confidence as such Bayesian probability is an attempt to recast the representation of probabilistic statements as an expression of the degree of confidence by which the beliefs they express are held Though probability initially had somewhat mundane motivations its modern influence and use is widespread ranging from evidence based medicine through six sigma all the way to the probabilistically checkable proof and the string theory landscape A summary of some interpretations of probability 2 Classical Frequentist Subjective PropensityMain hypothesis Principle of indifference Frequency of occurrence Degree of belief Degree of causal connectionConceptual basis Hypothetical symmetry Past data and reference class Knowledge and intuition Present state of systemConceptual approach Conjectural Empirical Subjective MetaphysicalSingle case possible Yes No Yes YesPrecise Yes No No YesProblems Ambiguity in principle of indifference Circular definition Reference class problem Disputed conceptClassical definition EditMain article Classical definition of probability The first attempt at mathematical rigour in the field of probability championed by Pierre Simon Laplace is now known as the classical definition Developed from studies of games of chance such as rolling dice it states that probability is shared equally between all the possible outcomes provided these outcomes can be deemed equally likely 1 3 1 The theory of chance consists in reducing all the events of the same kind to a certain number of cases equally possible that is to say to such as we may be equally undecided about in regard to their existence and in determining the number of cases favorable to the event whose probability is sought The ratio of this number to that of all the cases possible is the measure of this probability which is thus simply a fraction whose numerator is the number of favorable cases and whose denominator is the number of all the cases possible Pierre Simon Laplace A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities 7 The classical definition of probability works well for situations with only a finite number of equally likely outcomes This can be represented mathematically as follows If a random experiment can result in N mutually exclusive and equally likely outcomes and if NA of these outcomes result in the occurrence of the event A the probability of A is defined by P A N A N displaystyle P A N A over N There are two clear limitations to the classical definition 18 Firstly it is applicable only to situations in which there is only a finite number of possible outcomes But some important random experiments such as tossing a coin until it shows heads give rise to an infinite set of outcomes And secondly it requires an a priori determination that all possible outcomes are equally likely without falling in a trap of circular reasoning by relying on the notion of probability In using the terminology we may be equally undecided Laplace assumed by what has been called the principle of insufficient reason that all possible outcomes are equally likely if there is no known reason to assume otherwise for which there is no obvious justification 19 20 Frequentism Edit For frequentists the probability of the ball landing in any pocket can be determined only by repeated trials in which the observed result converges to the underlying probability in the long run Main article Frequency probability Frequentists posit that the probability of an event is its relative frequency over time 1 3 4 i e its relative frequency of occurrence after repeating a process a large number of times under similar conditions This is also known as aleatory probability The events are assumed to be governed by some random physical phenomena which are either phenomena that are predictable in principle with sufficient information see determinism or phenomena which are essentially unpredictable Examples of the first kind include tossing dice or spinning a roulette wheel an example of the second kind is radioactive decay In the case of tossing a fair coin frequentists say that the probability of getting a heads is 1 2 not because there are two equally likely outcomes but because repeated series of large numbers of trials demonstrate that the empirical frequency converges to the limit 1 2 as the number of trials goes to infinity If we denote by n a displaystyle textstyle n a the number of occurrences of an event A displaystyle mathcal A in n displaystyle textstyle n trials then if lim n n a n p displaystyle lim n to infty n a over n p we say that P A p displaystyle textstyle P mathcal A p The frequentist view has its own problems It is of course impossible to actually perform an infinity of repetitions of a random experiment to determine the probability of an event But if only a finite number of repetitions of the process are performed different relative frequencies will appear in different series of trials If these relative frequencies are to define the probability the probability will be slightly different every time it is measured But the real probability should be the same every time If we acknowledge the fact that we only can measure a probability with some error of measurement attached we still get into problems as the error of measurement can only be expressed as a probability the very concept we are trying to define This renders even the frequency definition circular see for example What is the Chance of an Earthquake 21 Subjectivism EditMain article Bayesian probability Subjectivists also known as Bayesians or followers of epistemic probability give the notion of probability a subjective status by regarding it as a measure of the degree of belief of the individual assessing the uncertainty of a particular situation Epistemic or subjective probability is sometimes called credence as opposed to the term chance for a propensity probability Some examples of epistemic probability are to assign a probability to the proposition that a proposed law of physics is true or to determine how probable it is that a suspect committed a crime based on the evidence presented The use of Bayesian probability raises the philosophical debate as to whether it can contribute valid justifications of belief Bayesians point to the work of Ramsey 10 p 182 and de Finetti 8 p 103 as proving that subjective beliefs must follow the laws of probability if they are to be coherent 22 Evidence casts doubt that humans will have coherent beliefs 23 24 The use of Bayesian probability involves specifying a prior probability This may be obtained from consideration of whether the required prior probability is greater or lesser than a reference probability clarification needed associated with an urn model or a thought experiment The issue is that for a given problem multiple thought experiments could apply and choosing one is a matter of judgement different people may assign different prior probabilities known as the reference class problem The sunrise problem provides an example Propensity EditMain article Propensity probability Propensity theorists think of probability as a physical propensity or disposition or tendency of a given type of physical situation to yield an outcome of a certain kind or to yield a long run relative frequency of such an outcome 25 This kind of objective probability is sometimes called chance Propensities or chances are not relative frequencies but purported causes of the observed stable relative frequencies Propensities are invoked to explain why repeating a certain kind of experiment will generate given outcome types at persistent rates which are known as propensities or chances Frequentists are unable to take this approach since relative frequencies do not exist for single tosses of a coin but only for large ensembles or collectives see single case possible in the table above 2 In contrast a propensitist is able to use the law of large numbers to explain the behaviour of long run frequencies This law which is a consequence of the axioms of probability says that if for example a coin is tossed repeatedly many times in such a way that its probability of landing heads is the same on each toss and the outcomes are probabilistically independent then the relative frequency of heads will be close to the probability of heads on each single toss This law allows that stable long run frequencies are a manifestation of invariant single case probabilities In addition to explaining the emergence of stable relative frequencies the idea of propensity is motivated by the desire to make sense of single case probability attributions in quantum mechanics such as the probability of decay of a particular atom at a particular time The main challenge facing propensity theories is to say exactly what propensity means And then of course to show that propensity thus defined has the required properties At present unfortunately none of the well recognised accounts of propensity comes close to meeting this challenge A propensity theory of probability was given by Charles Sanders Peirce 26 27 28 29 A later propensity theory was proposed by philosopher Karl Popper who had only slight acquaintance with the writings of C S Peirce however 26 27 Popper noted that the outcome of a physical experiment is produced by a certain set of generating conditions When we repeat an experiment as the saying goes we really perform another experiment with a more or less similar set of generating conditions To say that a set of generating conditions has propensity p of producing the outcome E means that those exact conditions if repeated indefinitely would produce an outcome sequence in which E occurred with limiting relative frequency p For Popper then a deterministic experiment would have propensity 0 or 1 for each outcome since those generating conditions would have same outcome on each trial In other words non trivial propensities those that differ from 0 and 1 only exist for genuinely nondeterministic experiments A number of other philosophers including David Miller and Donald A Gillies have proposed propensity theories somewhat similar to Popper s Other propensity theorists e g Ronald Giere 30 do not explicitly define propensities at all but rather see propensity as defined by the theoretical role it plays in science They argued for example that physical magnitudes such as electrical charge cannot be explicitly defined either in terms of more basic things but only in terms of what they do such as attracting and repelling other electrical charges In a similar way propensity is whatever fills the various roles that physical probability plays in science What roles does physical probability play in science What are its properties One central property of chance is that when known it constrains rational belief to take the same numerical value David Lewis called this the Principal Principle 1 3 3 amp 3 5 a term that philosophers have mostly adopted For example suppose you are certain that a particular biased coin has propensity 0 32 to land heads every time it is tossed What is then the correct price for a gamble that pays 1 if the coin lands heads and nothing otherwise According to the Principal Principle the fair price is 32 cents Logical epistemic and inductive probability EditMain article Probabilistic logic It is widely recognized that the term probability is sometimes used in contexts where it has nothing to do with physical randomness Consider for example the claim that the extinction of the dinosaurs was probably caused by a large meteorite hitting the earth Statements such as Hypothesis H is probably true have been interpreted to mean that the presently available empirical evidence E say supports H to a high degree This degree of support of H by E has been called the logical or epistemic or inductive probability of H given E The differences between these interpretations are rather small and may seem inconsequential One of the main points of disagreement lies in the relation between probability and belief Logical probabilities are conceived for example in Keynes Treatise on Probability 12 to be objective logical relations between propositions or sentences and hence not to depend in any way upon belief They are degrees of partial entailment or degrees of logical consequence not degrees of belief They do nevertheless dictate proper degrees of belief as is discussed below Frank P Ramsey on the other hand was skeptical about the existence of such objective logical relations and argued that evidential probability is the logic of partial belief 10 p 157 In other words Ramsey held that epistemic probabilities simply are degrees of rational belief rather than being logical relations that merely constrain degrees of rational belief Another point of disagreement concerns the uniqueness of evidential probability relative to a given state of knowledge Rudolf Carnap held for example that logical principles always determine a unique logical probability for any statement relative to any body of evidence Ramsey by contrast thought that while degrees of belief are subject to some rational constraints such as but not limited to the axioms of probability these constraints usually do not determine a unique value Rational people in other words may differ somewhat in their degrees of belief even if they all have the same information Prediction EditMain article Predictive inference An alternative account of probability emphasizes the role of prediction predicting future observations on the basis of past observations not on unobservable parameters In its modern form it is mainly in the Bayesian vein This was the main function of probability before the 20th century 31 but fell out of favor compared to the parametric approach which modeled phenomena as a physical system that was observed with error such as in celestial mechanics The modern predictive approach was pioneered by Bruno de Finetti with the central idea of exchangeability that future observations should behave like past observations 31 This view came to the attention of the Anglophone world with the 1974 translation of de Finetti s book 31 and has since been propounded by such statisticians as Seymour Geisser Axiomatic probability EditThe mathematics of probability can be developed on an entirely axiomatic basis that is independent of any interpretation see the articles on probability theory and probability axioms for a detailed treatment See also EditCoverage probability Frequency statistics Negative probability Philosophy of mathematics Philosophy of statistics Pignistic probability Probability amplitude quantum mechanics Sunrise problem Bayesian epistemologyReferences Edit a b c d Hajek Alan 21 October 2002 Zalta Edward N ed Interpretations of Probability The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The taxonomy of probability interpretations given here is similar to that of the longer and more complete Interpretations of Probability article in the online Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy References to that article include a parenthetic section number where appropriate A partial outline of that article Section 2 Criteria of adequacy for the interpretations of probability Section 3 3 1 Classical Probability 3 2 Logical Probability 3 3 Subjective Probability 3 4 Frequency Interpretations 3 5 Propensity Interpretations a b c de Elia Ramon Laprise Rene 2005 Diversity in interpretations of probability implications for weather forecasting Monthly Weather Review 133 5 1129 1143 Bibcode 2005MWRv 133 1129D doi 10 1175 mwr2913 1 S2CID 123135127 There are several schools of thought regarding the interpretation of probabilities none of them without flaws internal contradictions or paradoxes p 1129 There are no standard classifications of probability interpretations and even the more popular ones may suffer subtle variations from text to text p 1130 The classification in this article is representative as are the authors and ideas claimed for each classification Venn John 1876 The Logic of Chance London MacMillan Reichenbach Hans 1948 The theory of probability an inquiry into the logical and mathematical foundations of the calculus of probability University of California Press English translation of the original 1935 German ASIN B000R0D5MS Mises Richard 1981 Probability statistics and truth New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 24214 9 English translation of the third German edition of 1951 which was published 30 years after the first German edition a b Rowbottom Darrell 2015 Probability Cambridge Polity ISBN 978 0745652573 a b Laplace P S 1814 English edition 1951 A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities New York Dover Publications Inc a b de Finetti Bruno 1964 Foresight its Logical laws its Subjective Sources In Kyburg H E ed Studies in Subjective Probability H E Smokler New York Wiley pp 93 158 Translation of the 1937 French original with later notes added a b Savage L J 1954 The foundations of statistics New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 486 62349 8 a b c Ramsey F P 1931 Chapter VII Truth and Probability 1926 PDF In Braithwaite R B ed Foundations of Mathematics and Other Logical Essays London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co pp 156 198 Retrieved 15 August 2013 Contains three chapters essays by Ramsey The electronic version contains only those three Cox Richard Threlkeld 1961 The algebra of probable inference Baltimore Johns Hopkins Press a b Keynes John Maynard 1921 A Treatise on Probability MacMillan Retrieved 15 August 2013 Carnap Rudolph 1950 Logical Foundations of Probability Chicago University of Chicago Press Carnap coined the notion probability1 and probability2 for evidential and physical probability respectively Gillies Donald 2000 Philosophical theories of probability London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415182768 Fermat and Pascal on Probability socsci uci edu Laszlo E Szabo A Physicalist Interpretation of Probability Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Talk presented on the Philosophy of Science Seminar Eotvos Budapest 8 October 2001 Laszlo E Szabo Objective probability like things with and without objective indeterminism Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 38 2007 626 634 Preprint Spanos Aris 1986 Statistical foundations of econometric modelling Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521269124 Simon French John Maule Nadia Papamichail 2009 Decision Behaviour Analysis and Support Cambridge University Press p 221 ISBN 978 1 139 48098 7 Nils Eric Sahlin 2013 2 On Higher Order Beliefs In J P Dubucs ed Philosophy of Probability Springer p 30 ISBN 978 94 015 8208 7 Freedman David and Philip B Stark 2003 What is the Chance of an Earthquake Earthquake Science and Seismic Risk Jaynes E T 2003 Probability theory the logic of science Cambridge UK New York NY Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521592710 Kahneman Daniel 2011 Thinking fast and slow New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0374275631 The book contains numerous examples of the difference between idealized and actual thought W hen called upon to judge probability people actually judge something else and believe they have judged probability p 98 Grove William M Meehl Paul E 1996 Comparative efficiency of informal subjective impressionistic and formal mechanical algorithmic prediction procedures The clinical statistical controversy PDF Psychology Public Policy and Law 2 2 293 332 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 471 592 doi 10 1037 1076 8971 2 2 293 Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2011 Statistical decisions are consistently superior to the subjective decisions of experts Peterson Martin 2009 An introduction to decision theory Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press p 140 ISBN 978 0521716543 a b Miller Richard W 1975 Propensity Popper or Peirce British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 26 2 123 132 doi 10 1093 bjps 26 2 123 a b Haack Susan Kolenda Konstantin Konstantin Kolenda 1977 Two Fallibilists in Search of the Truth Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 51 Supplementary Volumes 63 104 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 51 1 63 JSTOR 4106816 Burks Arthur W 1978 Chance Cause and Reason An Inquiry into the Nature of Scientific Evidence University of Chicago Press pp 694 pages ISBN 978 0 226 08087 1 Peirce Charles Sanders and Burks Arthur W ed 1958 the Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce Volumes 7 and 8 Harvard University Press Cambridge MA also Belnap Press of Harvard University Press edition vols 7 8 bound together 798 pages online via InteLex reprinted in 1998 Thoemmes Continuum Ronald N Giere 1973 Objective Single Case Probabilities and the Foundations of Statistics Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics Vol 73 Elsevier pp 467 483 doi 10 1016 S0049 237X 09 70380 5 ISBN 978 0 444 10491 5 a b c Geisser Seymour 1993 Predictive Inference CRC Press ISBN 978 0 412 03471 8 Further reading EditCohen L 1989 An introduction to the philosophy of induction and probability Oxford New York Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198750789 Eagle Antony 2011 Philosophy of probability contemporary readings Abingdon Oxon New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415483872 Gillies Donald 2000 Philosophical theories of probability London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415182768 A comprehensive monograph covering the four principal current interpretations logical subjective frequency propensity Also proposes a novel intersubective interpretation Hacking Ian 2006 The emergence of probability a philosophical study of early ideas about probability induction and statistical inference Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521685573 Paul Humphreys ed 1994 Patrick Suppes Scientific Philosopher Synthese Library Springer Verlag Vol 1 Probability and Probabilistic Causality Vol 2 Philosophy of Physics Theory Structure and Measurement and Action Theory Jackson Frank and Robert Pargetter 1982 Physical Probability as a Propensity Nous 16 4 567 583 Khrennikov Andrei 2009 Interpretations of probability 2nd ed Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3110207484 Covers mostly non Kolmogorov probability models particularly with respect to quantum physics Lewis David 1983 Philosophical papers New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195036466 Plato Jan von 1994 Creating modern probability its mathematics physics and philosophy in historical perspective Cambridge England New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521597357 Rowbottom Darrell 2015 Probability Cambridge Polity ISBN 978 0745652573 A highly accessible introduction to the interpretation of probability Covers all the main interpretations and proposes a novel group level or intersubjective interpretation Also covers fallacies and applications of interpretations in the social and natural sciences Skyrms Brian 2000 Choice and chance an introduction to inductive logic Australia Belmont CA Wadsworth Thomson Learning ISBN 978 0534557379 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Probability interpretations Zalta Edward N ed Interpretations of Probability Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Interpretations of Probability at the Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project Interpretation of Probability at PhilPapers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Probability interpretations amp oldid 1169150299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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