
Lecture 15
... expected that errors are given in terms of ±1. Thus, stating a result as 3.4±0.2 means that 68% of values fall between 3.2 and 3.6. In some disciplines, it is common instead to state 90% confidence intervals (1.64), in which case the same measurements would be stated as 3.4±0.37. To ...
... expected that errors are given in terms of ±1. Thus, stating a result as 3.4±0.2 means that 68% of values fall between 3.2 and 3.6. In some disciplines, it is common instead to state 90% confidence intervals (1.64), in which case the same measurements would be stated as 3.4±0.37. To ...
Reduction(7).pdf
... underlying reality is unclear. In each case, it is unclear in what sense a probabilistic description can be viewed as a description of the reality under investigation. As a final example, the ‘derivation’ of thermodynamics from microphysics (see e.g., Batterman 1998), in all of its variations, appe ...
... underlying reality is unclear. In each case, it is unclear in what sense a probabilistic description can be viewed as a description of the reality under investigation. As a final example, the ‘derivation’ of thermodynamics from microphysics (see e.g., Batterman 1998), in all of its variations, appe ...