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popper-logic-scientific-discovery

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208<br />

some structural components of a theory of experience<br />

obtain, provided α is denumerable, and acceptable as a reference<br />

sequence:<br />

αF(γ) < αF(β).<br />

This means that, in the case of randomness, a comparison of ranges<br />

must lead to the same inequality as a comparison of relative frequencies.<br />

Accordingly, if we have randomness, we may correlate relative<br />

frequencies with the ranges in order to make the ranges measurable.<br />

But this is just what we did, although indirectly, in section 71, when<br />

we defined the formally singular probability statement. Indeed, from<br />

the assumptions made, we might have inferred immediately that<br />

αP k(γ) < αP k(β).<br />

So we have come back to our starting point, the problem of the<br />

interpretation of probability. And we now find that the conflict<br />

between objective and subjective theories, which at first seemed so<br />

obdurate, may be eliminated altogether by the somewhat obvious<br />

definition of formally singular probability.

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