Abstract
Mises’ (1919) concept of irregular (‘random’) sequence resisted precise mathematical definition for over four decades. (See Martin-Löf, 1970, for some details.) This circumstance led many to see the difficulty of defining ‘irregular’ as the obstacle to success of Mises’ program, and to suppose that the solution of that difficulty in recent years has finally set probability theory on the sure path of a science along lines that Mises had envisaged. To the contrary, I shall argue that since stochastic processes do not go on forever, Mises’ identification of each such processes with the infinite sequence of outputs it would produce if it ran forever is a metaphysical conceit that provides no physical interpretation of probability.
Once one has clarified the concept of random sequence, one can define the probability of an event as the limit of the relative frequency with which this event occurs in the random sequence. This concept of probability then has a well defined physical interpretation.
(Schnorr, 1971, pp. 8–9)
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Jeffrey, R.C. (1977). Mises Redux. In: Butts, R.E., Hintikka, J. (eds) Basic Problems in Methodology and Linguistics. The University of Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science, vol 11. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0837-1_13
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0837-1_13
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