Mathematics (Mar 2025)
The Heroic Age of Probability: Kolmogorov, Doob, Lévy, Khinchin and Feller
Abstract
We survey some of the main developments in probability theory during the so-called “heroic age”; that is, the period from the nineteen twenties to the early nineteen fifties. It was during the heroic age that probability finally attained the status of a mathematical discipline in the full sense of the term, with a complete axiomatic basis and incontestable standards of intellectual rigor to complement and support the extraordinarily rich intuitive content that has always been part of probability theory from its very inception. The axiomatic basis and mathematical rigor are themselves rooted in the abstract theory of measure and integration, which now comprises the very bedrock of modern probability, and among the central characters in the measure-theoretic “re-invention” of probability during the heroic age one finds, in particular, Kolmogorov, Doob, Lévy, Khinchin and Feller, each of whom fundamentally shaped the structure of modern probability. In this survey, we attempt a brief sketch of some of the main contributions of each of these pioneers.
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