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Address to the Members of the Actuarial Society of Edinburgh, 1st November 1877

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2016

Extract

Perhaps the most important lesson many of you can learn—one that is frequently lost sight of by persons who are solely or mainly engaged in theoretical studies—is that the researches which you are pursuing, by the aid of a variety of complicated symbols, are, after all, not merely elaborate mathematical puzzles to be solved principally for the purpose of awakening or sharpening the intellect, but have, for you at least, an eminently practical aim as well, and are insisted on as part of the education of an Actuary, with a view to their serving as the framework on which, when afterwards called upon, he must be prepared to base actual business transactions involving large sums of money, or, it may be, to lay down principles for the regulation in all its various details of a life assurance office.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 1879

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