Probability Theory
Abstract
It is customary to set the origins of Probability Theory at the 17th century and
relate them to combinatorial problems of games of chance. The latter can hardly be
considered a serious occupation. However, it is games of chance that led to problems
which could not be stated and solved within the framework of the then existing
mathematical models, and thereby stimulated the introduction of new concepts, approaches
and ideas. These new elements can already be encountered in writings by
P. Fermat, D. Pascal, C. Huygens and, in a more developed form and somewhat
later, in the works of J. Bernoulli, P.-S. Laplace, C.F. Gauss and others. The abovementioned
names undoubtedly decorate the genealogy of Probability Theory which,
as we saw, is also related to some extent to the vices of society. Incidentally, as it
soon became clear, it is precisely this last circumstance that can make Probability
Theory more attractive to the reader.
The first text on Probability Theory was Huygens’ treatise De Ratiociniis in Ludo
Alea (“On Ratiocination in Dice Games”, 1657). A bit later in 1663 the book Liber
de Ludo Aleae (“Book on Games of Chance”) by G. Cardano was published (in
fact it was written earlier, in the mid 16th century). The subject of these treatises
was the same as in the writings of Fermat and Pascal: dice and card games (problems
within the framework of Sect. 1.2 of the present book). As if Huygens foresaw
future events, he wrote that if the reader studied the subject closely, he would notice
that one was not dealing just with a game here, but rather that the foundations
of a very interesting and deep theory were being laid. Huygens’ treatise, which is
also known as the first text introducing the concept of mathematical expectation,
was later included by J. Bernoulli in his famous book Ars Conjectandi (“The Art
of Conjecturing”; published posthumously in 1713). To this book is related the notion
of the so-called Bernoulli scheme (see Sect. 1.3), for which Bernoulli gave a
cumbersome (cf. our Sect. 5.1) but mathematically faultless proof of the first limit
theorem of Probability Theory, the Law of Large Numbers.