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Ultimate computer science is not about what is probable but what is possible.
This criterion, however, is too vague as it stands: what is probable or plausible behaviour in one person is not in another, and what is probable in one set of circumstances is not so in another.
The questions readers ought to ask when confronting a "what-if" as opposed to "what-is" article are: Does the writer make it clear what is known, what is probable, and what is merely possible?
The distinction between what is possible and what is probable represents the major issue.
Art is about what is probable, science is about what is necessary; art is explained by operations, whereas science is explained by arguments (DOS 383, and especially 416).
Cicero renders the Greek pithanon as probabile (and sometimes as veri simile), which modern editors sometimes translate in terms of what is probable or likely to be true.
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Aristotle in his Poetics insisted that literature should reflect nature that even highly idealized characters should possess recognizable human qualities and that what was probable took precedence over what was merely possible.
In an interview, Mr. Bonnouvrier said designers and model bookers were encouraging extreme thinness, so much so that several of the models he represents, when asked about their weight, have refused to seek medical attention for what are probable eating disorders.
The Oxford English Dictionary tells us that prior to the 20th century the term "conjecture" was used to connote not a hypothesis reached by non-rational means, but rather one which is "unverified," or which is "a conclusion as to what is likely or probable" (as opposed to the results of demonstration).
So, what is more probable than not to have happened?
"What is the probable impact of drone operations on personal privacy?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com