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Over the last three or four centuries, different mathematicians proposed several competing versions of a calculus formalizing the reasoning about plausibility, but there was a lack of consensus about the axioms that should sit at the foundation of such a plausibility calculus. This conundrum was finally broken in 1961 by Richard Cox, a physicist at the Johns Hopkins University. Today, we will discuss his brilliant idea.
By Alex ChadyukOver the last three or four centuries, different mathematicians proposed several competing versions of a calculus formalizing the reasoning about plausibility, but there was a lack of consensus about the axioms that should sit at the foundation of such a plausibility calculus. This conundrum was finally broken in 1961 by Richard Cox, a physicist at the Johns Hopkins University. Today, we will discuss his brilliant idea.