From what I understand, the Kolmogorov axioms make no mention of conditional probability. That is simply defined. If I really want to show how probability actually works, I'm not going to argue "by definition". Does anyone know a modified form that uses simpler axioms than P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B)?
If you simply view P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B) as a shorthand, with "P(A|B)" as just an arbitrary symbol, then you're right - it needs no more explanation. But we don't consider P(A|B) to be just an arbitary symbol - we think it has a specific meaning, which is "the probability of A given B". And we think that "P(A∩B)/P(B)" has been chosen to equal "P(A|B)" because it has the properties we feel "the probability of A given B" should have.
I think DanielLC is asking why it is specifically P(A∩B)/P(B), and not some other formula, that has been chosen to correspond with the intuitive notion of "the probability of A given B".
In that case, it's no wonder that I'm having trouble relating, because I didn't understand what "the probability of A given B" meant until somebody told me it was P(A∩B)/P(B).
There is a larger point here:
In my opinion, an ... (read more)