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" Nevertheless, that which is true of the infancy of physical science in the Greek world, that which is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age in these latter days of the nineteenth century. The... "
Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution - Página 39
por Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889
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The Reign of Queen Victoria: A Survey of Fifty Years of Progress, Volumen2

Thomas Humphry Ward - 1887 - 642 páginas
...who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. They have their weaknesses, their follies, then- vanities, and their rivalries, like the rest of the world ; but, whatever by-ends may mar their dignity and impede their usefulness, this chief end redeems them.1 Nothing great...
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The Popular Science Monthly, Volumen32

1888 - 920 páginas
...of physical science in the Greek world, that which is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age...made, are made, and will be made, by men who seek * There are excellent remarks to the same effect in Zeller's " Philosophic der Griechen," Theil. II,...
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The Advance of Science in the Last Half-century

Thomas Henry Huxley - 1889 - 160 páginas
...of physical science in the Greek world, that which is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age...by men who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. They have their weaknesses, their follies, their vanities, and their rivalries, like the rest...
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Unitarianism: Its Origin and History: A Course of Sixteen Lectures Delivered ...

1889 - 438 páginas
...Nothing great in Science has ever been done by men who lack the divine afflatus of the truth-seeker. The great steps in its progress have been made, are...who seek knowledge simply because they crave it." * 1 The Advance of Science in the Last Half Century. TH Huxley, FRS Dr. William B. Carpenter, a representative...
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Unitarianism: Its Origin and History: A Course of Sixteen Lectures Delivered ...

1890 - 436 páginas
...Nothing great in Science has ever been done by men who lack the divine afflatus of the truth-seeker. The great steps in its progress have been made, are...who seek knowledge simply because they crave it." 1 1 The Advance of Science in the Last Half Century. TH Huxley, FRS Dr. William B. Carpenter, a representative...
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The University Magazine and Free Review, Volumen7

John Mackinnon Robertson, G. Astor Singer - 1897 - 708 páginas
...laboratory, and the lecture-hall. " The great steps in the progress of science,"1 wrote Huxley in 1887, " have been made, are made, and will be made, by men who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. Nothing great in science has ever been done by men, whatever their powers, in whom the divine...
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Method and Results

Thomas Henry Huxley - 1898 - 452 páginas
...of physical science in the Greek world, that which is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age in these latter days of the nineteenth century A The great steps in its progress have been made, ! are made, and will be made, by men who seek \Jmowledge...
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Collected Essays, Volumen1

Thomas Henry Huxley - 1901 - 456 páginas
...physical science in the Greek world, that whicli is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age...by men who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. They have their weaknesses, their follies, their vanities, and their rivalries, like the rest...
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The standard model and beyond

M. Zralek - 1903 - 556 páginas
...useful arts with the pursuit of pure science for its own sake, and among these Mr. Huxley observes that: "The great steps in its progress have been made, are...by men who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. Nothing great in science has ever been done by men, whatever their powers, in whom the divine...
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Selected Essays and Addresses of Thomas Henry Huxley

Thomas Henry Huxley - 1910 - 446 páginas
...of physical science in the Greek world, that which is true of its adolescence in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, remains true of its riper age...men who seek knowledge" simply because they crave for it. They have their weaknesses, their follies, their vanities, and their rivalries, like the rest...
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