The Doctrine Of Chances
The Doctrine of Chances
is a book on
probability theory
by 18th-century French
mathematician
Abraham de Moivre
, published in
1733
. De Moivre wrote in English because he resided in England at the time, having fled France to escape the persecution of Protestants. The book's title came to be synonymous with
probability theory
, and accordingly the phrase was used in
Thomas Bayes
' famous posthumous paper
An Essay Toward Solving a Problem in the Doctrine of Chances
, wherein a version of
Bayes' theorem
was first introduced. The second edition of de Moivre's book introduced the concept of
normal distributions
as approximations to
binomial distributions
. In effect de Moivre proved a weak version of the
central limit theorem
. Sometimes his result is called the
theorem of de Moivre-Laplace
.
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