Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 August 2016
Until within a very recent period the doctrines of probability have been applied to scarcely any great public purpose except the Assurance of human life. In that particular department of knowledge, a number of labourers have been for many years busily occupied in gathering the facts, endeavouring to classify events, and trace some general laws. In later years, researches have been extended into the effects of different classes of diseases upon health and longevity. Still more recently, the calculations of fidelity risks, of railway and other accidents, of bankruptcy, and of other circumstances affecting the person of an individual, or his commercial dealings, have been made with a view of proving their capability of being estimated for Insurance.