Two Mathematical Approaches to Random Fluctuations

Perspectives on Science 24 (1):45-72 (2016)
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Abstract

Randomness, uncertainty, and lack of regularity had concerned savants for a long time. As early as the seventeenth century, Blaise Pascal conceived the arithmetic of chance for gambling. At the height of positional astronomy, mathematicians developed a theory of errors to cope with random deviations in astronomical observations. In the nineteenth century, pioneers of statistics employed probabilistic calculus to define “normal” and “pathological” in the distribution of social characters, while physicists devised the statistical-mechanical interpretation of thermodynamic effects. By the end of the century, a probabilistic worldview—as historians Lorrain Daston, Theodore Porter, and Stephen Stigler.

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Chen-Pang Yeang
University of Toronto

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The taming of chance.Ian Hacking - 1990 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
Evident atoms: visuality in Jean Perrin’s Brownian motion research.Charlotte Bigg - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (3):312-322.

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