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)?
There definition is equivalent to having an axiom that states that P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B). That's not that difficult a concept, but it's still more advanced than axioms tend to be. Compare it to the other three. It's like Euclid's fifth postulate.
But it's not an axiom; it's a definition.
It bothers me that you seem to be under the impression that the equation represents some kind of substantive claim. It doesn't; it's just the establishment of a shorthand notation. (It bothers me even more that other commenters don't seem to be noticing that you're suffering from a confusion about this.)
A reasonable question to ask might be: "why is the quantity P(A∩B)/P(B) interesting enough to be worth having a shorthand notation for?" But that isn't what you asked, and the answer wouldn't consist of a ... (read more)