rdfs:comment
| - Eventology (from lat. eventum, eventus — event, outcome, success, destiny and + logos) [20] is a scientific theory that studies eventful nature of a mind [14] and a matter [14]; a huge event variety of subjects (mind) and objects (matter); an event structure and event-valued functions; an origin, expansion, and development of sets of events; connections of events with each other; establishes the general and particular laws of eventful existence of a mind and a matter in all event occurrences and event properties.
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abstract
| - Eventology (from lat. eventum, eventus — event, outcome, success, destiny and + logos) [20] is a scientific theory that studies eventful nature of a mind [14] and a matter [14]; a huge event variety of subjects (mind) and objects (matter); an event structure and event-valued functions; an origin, expansion, and development of sets of events; connections of events with each other; establishes the general and particular laws of eventful existence of a mind and a matter in all event occurrences and event properties. In a basis of eventology lays remarks, which now seems obvious: «the matter and the mind is simply convenient way of linkage of events together» (Russell [12, 13], 1946; Vorob’ov, 2001) and «the mind appears there and then, where and when there is an ability to make a probabilistic choice» (Lefebvre [6, 8], 2003). Using these remarks as initial axioms and also well-developed apparatus of mathematical eventology (crisp and fuzzy), eventology introduces mind directly as an eventological distribution of set of events in scientific and mathematical research and understands an eventological movement of events (movement of a matter or a mind) as changing the eventological distributions. From the point of eventology view, the probability is a property of an event: an event has a probability the same as the probability has an event; subjective probability [5] is a property of a subjective event. Such point of view allows to develop the eventological theory of fuzzy events which exclusively from positions of Kolmogorov’s axiomatics of probability theory offers the strictly proved general approach to the eventological description of various kinds of fuzziness and uncertainty, including those kinds to which possibility theory [2], Dempster-Shafer theory of evidence [15], fuzzy sets and fuzzy logic of Zadeh [21, 22, 23, 24, 25], etc. are devoted. Alongside with philosophical questions, eventology also mentions economic, social and other questions in different applied fields of natural and human sciences (see «Eventology and its applications»).
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