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    Scientific practice often succeeds with non-countably-add... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Restricting to countable additivity is itself a conventional stipulation, not a mathematical necessity, as Dubins and Savage showed in 'How to Gamble If You Must' (1965).

    Scientific practice often succeeds with non-countably-additive models, suggesting countability isn't empirically necessary for applications.

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