The frequentist view may have been foreshadowed by
Aristotle, in
Rhetoric, when he wrote:
Poisson (1837) clearly distinguished between objective and subjective probabilities. Soon thereafter a flurry of nearly simultaneous publications by
Mill,
Ellis (1843) and Ellis (1854),
Cournot (1843), and
Fries introduced the frequentist view.
Venn (1866, 1876, 1888) He is also credited with some appreciation for subjective probability (prior to and without
Bayes' theorem).
Gauss and
Laplace used frequentist (and other) probability in derivations of the least squares method a century later, a generation before Poisson.
Laplace considered the probabilities of testimonies, tables of mortality, judgments of tribunals, etc. which are unlikely candidates for classical probability. In this view, Poisson's contribution was his sharp criticism of the alternative "inverse" (subjective, Bayesian) probability interpretation. Any criticism by
Gauss or
Laplace was muted and implicit. (However, note that their later derivations of
least squares did not use inverse probability.) Major contributors to "classical" statistics in the early 20th century included
Fisher,
Neyman, and
Pearson. Fisher contributed to most of statistics and made significance testing the core of experimental science, although he was critical of the frequentist concept of
"repeated sampling from the same population"; Neyman formulated confidence intervals and contributed heavily to sampling theory; Neyman and Pearson paired in the creation of hypothesis testing. All valued objectivity, so the best interpretation of probability available to them was frequentist. All were suspicious of "inverse probability" (the available alternative) with prior probabilities chosen by using the principle of indifference. Fisher said, ''"... the theory of inverse probability is founded upon an error, [referring to Bayes' theorem] and must be wholly rejected."'' While Neyman was a pure frequentist, Fisher's views of probability were unique: Both Fisher and Neyman had nuanced view of probability.
von Mises offered a combination of mathematical and philosophical support for frequentism in the era. ==Etymology==