The Law of Causality and Its Limits pp 155-160 | Cite as
Causality and Chance
Abstract
In ordinary life the word ‘accident’ is used mostly for an event that has taken place without having been intended. If we say for example “Today I have accidentally met N.N.”, we want thereby to say “I have met him without myself or himself having intended it”. However the term is not used if an event takes place that we expressly wanted to avoid. If, for example, a skater falls down while executing a complicated figure, he hardly will say: “I have fallen down accidentally, ” though he will use this term if he is made to fall by an unnoticed obstacle. If a shell is fired and misses its target because a sudden gust of wind interfered, we say that an accident caused the miss.
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References
- 3.Mises, R.v., Wahrscheinlichkeit, Statistik und Wahrheit, Wien (1928) [Probability, Statistics and 7Yuth, first English edition (1939); second English edition from 3rd (revised) German edition of 1951 (1957)], and the detailed presentation of probability calculation by the same author that appeared under the title Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung und ihre Anwendung in der Statistik und theoretischen Physik, Leipzig und Vienna (1931).Google Scholar
- 5.See also Mises, R.v., ‘Lieber Kausale und statistische Gesetzmässigkeiten in der Physik’, Naturwiss. (1930).Google Scholar