http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/archive/00003864/01/J._M._Keynes_and_L._von_Mises_on_Probability_(pdf).pdf
This paper discusses, on pages 6-7, Rothbard's comments on statistical inference. He says that the theory of statistics rests on the assumption that all samples will be distributed on a normal curve.
How is it possible to take this as anything other than a mistaken understanding by Rothbard of the Central Limit Theorem? That theorem does not say that all samples are distributed normally, but rather that for any non-normal distribution, the distribution of the averages of various groups can be made to approach as closely to normal as desired.
Furthermore, the CLT is not an assumption, as Rothbard said, but a theorem, logically derived from the axioms of probability theory.
I don't want Rothbard's statement to be absurd. Can any mathematicians think of an interpretation of Rothbard's words that makes sense?
You should probably send this question to someone who really knows Rothbard's writings as well as a lot of statistics...so email Robert Murphy or Walter Block.
[email protected]
I just looked at the PDF quickly, and I found it strange. I'm only a first year economic student and I wouldn't make such an elemntary mistake, which seems odd since Rothbard was very proficient in maths.
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows"
Bob Dylan
the fellow that wrote the pdf about what Rothbard said, then goes on to comment about it
It may stillremain true, however, that in contexts where randomcollectives do not exist (that is, contexts characterizedby lack of independent repetitions), as will often be thecase in economics, objective probabilities cannot beused. Given that Rothbard embraced an objective,frequency interpretation of numerical probability, hisrejection of statistics is a defensible and logicallyconsistent corollary. Moreover the rejection of the useof objective probabilities in economics is in agreementwith the conclusions of some of the most recent researchabout these matters, and with general arguments forinterpreting probabilities in economics asepistemological rather than objective.8
Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid
Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring
How does epistemological contrast with objective?
Freedom of markets is positively correlated with the degree of evolution in any society...
im sure if i had a PhD i could explain,
but i dont... so.....
nirgrahamUK: may stillremain true, however, that in contexts where randomcollectives do not exist (that is, contexts characterizedby lack of independent repetitions), as will often be thecase in economics, objective probabilities cannot beused. Given that Rothbard embraced an objective,frequency interpretation of numerical probability, hisrejection of statistics is a defensible and logicallyconsistent corollary. Moreover the rejection of the useof objective probabilities in economics is in agreementwith the conclusions of some of the most recent researchabout these matters, and with general arguments forinterpreting probabilities in economics asepistemological rather than objectiv
Yet none of this is Rothbard's argument. It's one thing to give a different reason for Rothbard's conclusion, but something else entirely to explain Rothbard's reasoning.
is it not analgous to other differences between austrians and neo-classicals.?
yes, you have models and given the assumptions you make, the models are good models. but contrariwise your assumptions are nonsense so i dont find your models useful. etc. etc.
im really speculating as i know next to nothing about statistics aside from basic stuff about averages and whatnots.
Jon Irenicus:ow does epistemological contrast with objective?
I believe the difference is that objective probability results from uncertainty in the case, whereas epistemological uncertainty results from incomplete knowledge. We say that the outcome of a pool shot is not likely to put a ball in the hole, but it might, which seems to express epistemological probability, since (many believe anyway) if we knew all the forces, the outcome could be calculated in advance. An example of the distinction seems to be in the various interpretations of quantum mechanics - whether the Heisenberg uncertainty principle refers to uncertainty in the thing (the electron doesn't have a certain position and velocity), which would be objective, or to uncertainty of knowledge (to measure the position, we use a wave of such a high energy that it changes the velocity) which would be epistemological. Thus, when we give the probability cloud, the probability of it being in some portion of the cloud is, in the first view, objective, and in the second, epistemological.
Ah I see, so it's basically a term of art then.
Kling on probabitily.
Argh, yet another article to look into for my paper on methodology! Luckily it's brief enough.
it was very informative article, i like how he categorised the three approaches to probability. (i wonder are there more?)
he said this:
Frank Knight was famous for describing a notion of uncertainty that could not be reduced to an objective probability distribution.
does that mean it could not be reduced to something that can be translated into the normal distribution that was mentioned earlier? is this then the rothbardian position?
under what conditions would it be incorrect to apply the CLT when wanting to run some statistical analysis? do economic matters of the kind that concerned rothbard share these conditions or no?
its just that this on the wiki page for clt caught my eye>>
let X1, X2, X3, ... Xn be a sequence of n independent and identically distributed (i.i.d) random variables each having finite values of expectation µ and variance σ2 > 0. etc.
i am a layman so forgive me if what im saying seems particularly stupid.