The mean duration of the period at which I arrive is therefore almost exactly that which Dr. Lamont had previously obtained, or 10-45 years." Judging this close coincidence of results according to the theory of probabilities, it becomes highly probable... Investigations in Currency and Finance - 216 ページWilliam Stanley Jevons 著 - 1884 - 428 ページ全文表示 - この書籍について
| Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland - 1876 - 574 ページ
...which I arrive is therefore almost exactly that which Dr. Lament had previously obtained, or 1 0.45 years." Judging this close coincidence of results...in the Transactions of the Manchester Statistical Society, attributes the periodic variation to mental action. A commercial panic ho holds is the destruction... | |
| Walton Hale Hamilton - 1916 - 914 ページ
...sun-spots was 10.45 years. His conclusion agrees with that previously obtained by Dr. Lament. Judging by this close coincidence of results according to the...of probabilities, it becomes highly probable that the two periodic phenomena, varying so nearly in the same mean period, are connected as cause and effect.... | |
| Charles Franklin Dunbar, Frank William Taussig, Abbott Payson Usher, Alvin Harvey Hansen, William Leonard Crum, Edward Chamberlin, Arthur Eli Monroe - 1927 - 798 ページ
...the sun-spot interval, 10.45 years, made by Mr. JA Broun and Dr. Lamont, W. Stanley Jevons proceeds:] Judging this close coincidence of results according...in the same mean period, are connected as cause and effect.8 (HS Jevons, developing the sun-spot theory of WS Jevons). [The heat emitted by the sun varies... | |
| David Williams - 1984 - 266 ページ
...compares with the mean duration of the sunspot period at that time of 10.45 years. Jevons concludes: "Judging this close coincidence of results according...same mean period, are connected as cause and effect." However, this conclusion was not, at that time, susceptible of scientific proof. In "Commercial Crisis... | |
| Mary S. Morgan - 1990 - 318 ページ
...at 10.45 years. Jevons argued: Judging this close coincidence of results according to the theories of probabilities, it becomes highly probable that...same mean period, are connected as cause and effect. (Jevons, 1878: see (1884), p. 195) His theory was based on a 'perfect coincidence' which is by itself... | |
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