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Exposition of a New Theory on the Measurement of Risk
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Citations
4
References
1954
Year
Bayesian Decision TheoryFinancial Risk ManagementRisk MetricRisk AnalysisNew TheoryRisk ResponsePossible GainRisk-taking BehaviorRisk ManagementManagementGeneral AgreementDecision TheoryStatisticsEconomicsEqui-probable CasesRisk PerceptionInternational Risk ManagementRisk MonitoringRisk MeasurementProbability TheoryRisk GovernanceFinanceInternational Financial RiskPossibility TheoryImprecise ProbabilityBusinessRisk Analysis (Business)Risk Decisions
EVER SINCE mathematicians first began to study the measurement of risk there has been general agreement on the following proposition: Expected values are computed by multiplying each possible gain by the number of ways in which it can occur, and then dividing the sum of these products by the total number of possible cases where, in this theory, the consideration of cases which are all of the same probability is insisted upon. If this rule be accepted, what remains to be done within the framework of this theory amounts to the enumeration of all alternatives, their breakdown into equi-probable cases and, finally, their insertion into corresponding classifications…
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