The empire of chance : how probability changed science and everyday life / Gerd Gigerenzer [and others].

Author
Gigerenzer, Gerd [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1989.
Description
1 online resource (xvii, 340 pages)

Availability

Available Online

Details

Subject(s)
Series
Summary note
The Empire of Chance tells how quantitative ideas of chance transformed the natural and social sciences, as well as daily life over the last 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 in biology, physics and psychology. Themes recur - determinism, inference, causality, free will, evidence, the shifting meaning of probability - but in dramatically different disciplinary and historical contexts. In contrast to the literature on the mathematical development of probability and statistics, this book centres on how these technical innovations remade our conceptions of nature, mind and society. Written by an interdisciplinary team of historians and philosophers, this readable, lucid account keeps technical material to an absolute minimum. It is aimed not only at specialists in the history and philosophy of science, but also at the general reader and scholars in other disciplines.
Notes
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
Contents
  • Classical Probabilities, 1660-1840
  • Statistical Probabilities, 1820-1900
  • The Inference Experts
  • Chance And Life: Controversies In Modern Biology
  • The Probabilistic Revolution In Physics
  • Statistics Of The Mind
  • Numbers Rule The World
  • The Implications Of Chance.
ISBN
9780511720482 (ebook)
Statement on language in description
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