Incomplete knowledge must be considered as perfectly normal in probability theory; we might even say that, if we knew all the circumstances of a phenomenon, there would be no place for probability, and we would know the outcome with certainty.


Translated by Douglas Scott, Probability and Certainty


Incomplete knowledge must be considered as perfectly normal in probability theory; we might even say that, if we knew all the circumstances of a...

Incomplete knowledge must be considered as perfectly normal in probability theory; we might even say that, if we knew all the circumstances of a...

Incomplete knowledge must be considered as perfectly normal in probability theory; we might even say that, if we knew all the circumstances of a...

Incomplete knowledge must be considered as perfectly normal in probability theory; we might even say that, if we knew all the circumstances of a...