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Numbers cast a new light on life. Here, statistics meet evolutionary thought. Karl Pearson's The Chances Of Death: And Other Studies In Evolution (Volume II) gathers essays in which quantification and Darwinian inquiry intersect: probability and statistics are marshalled not as abstruse mathematics but as instruments to interrogate mortality, variation and the logic of natural selection theory. An evolutionary essays collection and scientific nonfiction anthology, the book brings together classic biology studies and methodological reflection from the cusp of Victorian era science and the early 20th century. Pearson argues with empirical exactitude; his insistence on measurement remodelled how biologists and social thinkers treated variation. The tone is brisk and rigorous - technical enough to inform specialists but written with a clarity that invites curious general readers. As part of the works of Karl Pearson, these essays reveal an experimental frame of mind that helped to form foundational evolutionary science and to establish probability and statistics as essential tools in biological thought. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Taken together, these essays document a formative moment when statistical methods reshaped discussions of heredity, selection and the social consequences of biological thought. That historical importance makes the volume a valuable resource for science history readers and a revealing academic reference book for scholars tracing the rise of probability and statistics within biology. At the same time, Pearson's direct prose rewards curious general readers; classic-literature collectors and specialist libraries will appreciate the book as a tangible record of foundational evolutionary science and as an early example of scientific nonfiction anthology that addresses human evolution analysis with numerical care. The combination of intellectual rigour and readable argument makes the collection both instructive and oddly affecting, a rare item for readers who enjoy the intersection of ideas and method.