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Philosophy of probability and statistical modelling

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2021

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Cambridge University Press
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Suárez M. Philosophy of Probability and Statistical Modelling. Cambridge University Press; 2021.

Abstract

This Element has two main aims. The first one (sections 1-7) is an historically informed review of the philosophy of probability. It describes recent historiography, lays out the distinction between subjective and objective notions, and concludes by applying the historical lessons to the main interpretations of probability. The second aim (sections 8-13) focuses entirely on objective probability, and advances a number of novel theses regarding its role in scientific practice. A distinction is drawn between traditional attempts to interpret chance, and a novel methodological study of its application. A radical form of pluralism is then introduced, advocating a tripartite distinction between propensities, probabilities and frequencies. Finally, a distinction is drawn between two different applications of chance in statistical modelling which, it is argued, vindicates the overall methodological approach. The ensuing conception of objective probability in practice is the 'complex nexus of chance'.

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The initial phase of research towards this book was funded by the European Commission (Marie-Curie project number 329430, call identifier FP7-PEOPLE-2012-IEF: https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/329430) and the Spanish Government (DGCyT project number FFI2014-57064-P), and was conducted within the framework of the ProbPropCond (probpropcond.blogs.sas.ac.uk) research project that I directed while employed at the University of London (School of Advanced Study) during the 2013–14 and 2014–15 academic years. I thank the participants at the regular meetings and seminars, particularly Dorothy Edgington, Hugh Mellor, and Luke Glynn, for their comments, as well as the participants in the final workshop entitled ‘Propensities, Chances and Statistics’. Thanks also to audiences at the BSPS 2014 and 2015 conferences, and the EPSA2015 conferences for reactions to related material. Later phases of the research towards particularly part II of this book were carried out with support from the Agencia Estatal de Investigación of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation project grants FFI2014-57064-P and PGC2018-099423-B-I00.

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