Actuarial science (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Actuarial science" in English language version.

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actuaries.org.uk

ca.gov

library.ca.gov

casact.org

casualtyactuarialsociety.com

chbrp.org

contingencies.org

doi.org

economist.com

forumromanum.org

  • Johnston 1932, §475–§476. Johnston, Harold Whetstone (1932) [1903]. "Burial Places and Funeral Ceremonies". The Private Life of the Romans. Revised by Mary Johnston. Chicago, Atlanta: Scott, Foresman and Company. pp. §475–§476. LCCN 32007692. Archived from the original on April 14, 2003. Retrieved 2006-06-26. Early in the Empire, associations were formed for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members, whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose of building columbāria, or for both....If the members had provided places for the disposal of their bodies after death, they now provided for the necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When a member died, a stated sum was drawn from the treasury for his funeral....If the purpose of the society was the building of a columbārium, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided into what we should call shares (sortēs virīlēs), each member taking as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

gmu.edu

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  • Feldblum 2001, pp. 8–9. Feldblum, Sholom (2001) [1990]. "Introduction". In Robert F. Lowe (ed.). Foundations of Casualty Actuarial Science (4th ed.). Arlington County, Virginia: Casualty Actuarial Society. ISBN 0-9624762-2-6. LCCN 2001088378.
  • Johnston 1932, §475–§476. Johnston, Harold Whetstone (1932) [1903]. "Burial Places and Funeral Ceremonies". The Private Life of the Romans. Revised by Mary Johnston. Chicago, Atlanta: Scott, Foresman and Company. pp. §475–§476. LCCN 32007692. Archived from the original on April 14, 2003. Retrieved 2006-06-26. Early in the Empire, associations were formed for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members, whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose of building columbāria, or for both....If the members had provided places for the disposal of their bodies after death, they now provided for the necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When a member died, a stated sum was drawn from the treasury for his funeral....If the purpose of the society was the building of a columbārium, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided into what we should call shares (sortēs virīlēs), each member taking as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

mit.edu

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semanticscholar.org

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soa.org

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the-actuary.org.uk

uchicago.edu

chicagounbound.uchicago.edu

umd.edu

math.umd.edu

  • Slud 2006. Slud, Eric V. (2006) [2001]. "6: Commutation Functions, Reserves & Select Mortality" (PDF). Actuarial Mathematics and Life-Table Statistics (PDF). pp. 149–150. Retrieved 2006-06-28. The Commutation Functions are a computational device to ensure that net single premiums...can all be obtained from a single table lookup. Historically, this idea has been very important in saving calculational labor when arriving at premium quotes. Even now...company employees without quantitative training could calculate premiums in a spreadsheet format with the aid of a life table.

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