Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
This book begins with an introduction, chapter 1, to the basic ideas and methods of probability that are usually covered in a first course of lectures. The first part of the main text, subtitled Probability, comprising chapters 2–4, introduces the important ideas of probability in a reasonably informal and non-technical way. In particular, calculus is not a prerequisite.
The second part of the main text, subtitled Random Variables, comprising the final three chapters, extends these ideas to a wider range of important and practical applications. In these chapters it is assumed that the student has had some exposure to the small portfolio of ideas introduced in courses labelled ‘calculus’. In any case, to be on the safe side and make the book as self-contained as possible, brief expositions of the necessary results are included at the ends of appropriate chapters.
The material is arranged as follows.
Chapter 1 contains an elementary discussion of what we mean by probability, and how our intuitive knowledge of chance will shape a mathematical theory.
Chapter 2 introduces some notation, and sets out the central and crucial rules and ideas of probability. These include independence and conditioning.
Chapter 3 begins with a brief primer on counting and combinatorics, including binomial coefficients. This is illustrated with examples from the origins of probability, including famous classics such as the gambler's ruin problem, and others.
Chapter 4 introduces the idea of a probability distribution. At this elementary level the idea of a probability density, and ways of using it, are most easily grasped by analogy with the discrete case.
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- Probability and Random VariablesA Beginner's Guide, pp. xi - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999