Eventology: Difference between revisions
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imported>D. Matt Innis (well, there is his own evidence) |
imported>D. Matt Innis (how about this Peter?) |
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'''Eventology''' (literally "the study of events") is a term used from about 2000 onwards by Oleg Yu. Vorobyev, a mathematician at the [[Siberian Federal University]] in Russia, for his variant of [[probability theory]]. He claims the theory to be of "practical significance" both for "philosophical questions" and "economic, social and other questions in different applied fields" and to have "advanced to the foremost boundaries of natural sciences and human sciences." | '''Eventology''' (literally "the study of events") is a term used from about 2000 onwards by Oleg Yu. Vorobyev, a mathematician at the [[Siberian Federal University]] in Russia, for his variant of [[probability theory]]. He claims the theory to be of "practical significance" both for "philosophical questions" and "economic, social and other questions in different applied fields" and to have "advanced to the foremost boundaries of natural sciences and human sciences." Though there are several papers authored by him and his coworkers, there is no other corraborative evidence to support this claim. | ||
The term is also occasionally used outside mathematics to refer to the study of cultural and business events. | The term is also occasionally used outside mathematics to refer to the study of cultural and business events. |
Revision as of 07:29, 25 October 2009
Eventology (literally "the study of events") is a term used from about 2000 onwards by Oleg Yu. Vorobyev, a mathematician at the Siberian Federal University in Russia, for his variant of probability theory. He claims the theory to be of "practical significance" both for "philosophical questions" and "economic, social and other questions in different applied fields" and to have "advanced to the foremost boundaries of natural sciences and human sciences." Though there are several papers authored by him and his coworkers, there is no other corraborative evidence to support this claim.
The term is also occasionally used outside mathematics to refer to the study of cultural and business events.