segunda-feira, 17 de fevereiro de 2014

The Empire of Chance: How Probability Changed Science and Everyday Life


(Ideas in Context)

Gerd Gigerenzer, Zeno Swijtink, Theodore Porter, Lorraine Daston, John Beatty, Lorenz Kruger

Cambridge University Press | 1990 | 360 páginas | rar - pdf | 35,4 Mb

link (password : matav)

This book tells how quantitative ideas of chance have transformed the natural and social sciences as well as everyday life over the past three centuries. A continuous narrative connects the earliest application of probability and statistics in gambling and insurance to the most recent forays into law, medicine, polling, and baseball. Separate chapters explore the theoretical and methodological impact on biology, physics, and psychology. In contrast to the literature on the mathematical development of probability and statistics, this book centers on how these technical innovations recreated our conceptions of nature, mind, and society.

CONTENTS
Acknowledgments page xi
Introduction xiii
1 Classical probabilities, 1660-1840 1
1.1 Introduction 1
1.2 The beginnings 2
1.3 The classical interpretation 6
1.4 Determinism 11
1.5 Reasonableness 14
1.6 Risk in gambling and insurance 19
1.7 Evidence and causes 26
1.8 The moral sciences 32
1.9 Conclusion 34
2 Statistical probabilities, 1820-1900 37
2.1 Introduction 37
2.2 Statistical regularity and l'homme moyen 38
2.3 Opposition to statistics 45
2.4 Statistics and variation 48
2.5 The error law and correlation 53
2.6 The statistical critique of determinism 59
2.7 Conclusion 68
3 The inference experts 70
3.1 In want of a "system of mean results" 70
3.2 Analysis of variance 73
3.3 Fisher's antecedents: early significance tests and comparative experimentation
3.4 The controversy: Fisher vs. Neyman and Pearson 90
3.5 Hybridization: the silent solution 106
3.6 The statistical profession: intellectual autonomy 109
3.7 The statistical profession: institutions and influence 115
3.8 Conclusion 120
4 Chance and life: controversies in modem biology 123
4.1 Introduction 123
4.2 Spontaneity and control: chance in physiology 124
4.3 Coincidence and design: chance in natural history 132
4.4 Correlations and causes: chance in genetics 141
4.5 Sampling and selection: chance in evolutionary biology 152
5 The probabilistic revolution in physics 163
5.1 The background: classical physics 163
5.2 Probability in classical physics: the epistemic interpretation
5.3 Three limitations of classical physics: sources of probabilism
5.4 Comments on the three limitations 175
5.5 Mass phenomena and propensities 179
5.6 Explanations from probabilistic assumptions 182
5.7 The puzzle of irreversibility in time 187
5.8 The discontinuity underlying all change 190
6 Statistics of the mind 203
6.1 Introduction 203
6.2 The pre-statistical period 204
6.3 The new tools 205
6.4 From tools to theories of mind 211
6.5 A case study: from thinking to judgments under uncertainty
6.6 The return of the reasonable man 226

6.7 Conclusion 233

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