Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The free will theorem states: Given the axioms, if the choice about what measurement to take is not a function of the information accessible to the experimenters (free will assumption), then the results of the measurements cannot be determined by anything previous to the experiments. That is an "outcome open" theorem:
Brownian motion and the Poisson process are examples of Feller processes. More generally, every Lévy process is a Feller process. Bessel processes are Feller processes. Solutions to stochastic differential equations with Lipschitz continuous coefficients are Feller processes. [citation needed]
No free lunch theorem (philosophy of mathematics) No-hair theorem ; No-trade theorem ; No wandering domain theorem (ergodic theory) Noether's theorem (Lie groups, calculus of variations, differential invariants, physics) Noether's second theorem (calculus of variations, physics) Noether's theorem on rationality for surfaces (algebraic surfaces)
Tsirelson's stochastic differential equation (also Tsirelson's drift or Tsirelson's equation) is a stochastic differential equation which has a weak solution but no strong solution. It is therefore a counter-example and named after its discoverer Boris Tsirelson. [1] Tsirelson's equation is of the form
Ariana Grande stuns Drew Barrymore with heartfelt message during 'Wicked' interview "I don't know too much about what your relationship has been to this industry the whole time, but I do know what ...
Heart disease is the No. 1 cause of death in the U.S. Yet, according to the American Heart Association, half of Americans are unaware of this sobering statistic. The good news is that a diet ...
The name is literally imprinted on Baltimore. A plaque at the entrance to the Family Center at the Greater Baltimore Medical Center reads: "Donated by Nicholas and Mary Mangione."
Free-will libertarianism is the view that the free-will thesis (that we, ordinary humans, have free will) is true and that determinism is false; in first-order language, it is the view that we (ordinary humans) have free will and the world does not behave in the way described by determinism.