bookPrinceton University Press eBooksJun 30, 2020Closed access

A Mathematical Theory of Evidence

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Abstract

Both in science and in practical affairs we reason by combining facts only inconclusively supported by evidence. Building on an abstract understanding of this process of combination, this book constructs a new theory of epistemic probability. The theory draws on the work of A. P. Dempster but diverges from Depster's viewpoint by identifying his as epistemic probabilities and taking his rule for combining upper and lower as fundamental. The book opens with a critique of the well-known Bayesian theory of epistemic probability. It then proceeds to develop an alternative to the additive set functions and the rule of conditioning of the Bayesian theory: set functions that need only be what Choquet called monotone…

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11,880
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95.38
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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Econometrics
  • Computer science
  • Mathematics
  • Mathematical economics
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