Pierre-Simon Laplace, on the last page of his 1814 treatise A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities, writes, “We see, in this Essay, that the theory of probabilities is, in the end, only common sense boiled down to ‘calculus’; it points out in a precise way what rational minds understand by means of a sort of instinct, without necessarily being aware of it. It leaves nothing to doubt, in the choice of opinions and decisions; by its use one can always determine the most advantageous choice.” Again we see it: mathematics is the extension of common sense by other means.