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Extract
The paper commenced with a suggestion, that, as the inferences of ordinary logic admitted no premises but such as were absolutely certain, and as the premises with which we have to deal in the business of life were not certain, but only probable, therefore it was highly desirable that we should have a logic, or rules for drawing inferences on the case of probable premises.
The attention of the Society was then drawn to the 15th section of the article Probabilities, in the Encyclopœdia Metropolitana, and especially to the following passage: “It is an even chance that A is B, and the same that B is C; and therefore, 1 to 3 from these grounds only that A is C. But other considerations of themselves give an even chance that A is C. What is the resulting degree of evidence that A is C?” To which query the answer in the Encyclopœdia is .
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- Proceedings 1849-50
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1850