
Marquis de Condorcet. Tribute to Duhamel du Monceau, April 30, 1783
Source: Gooyanews website, 2010 http://news.gooya.com/politics/archives/2010/03/102134.php
Marquis de Condorcet. Tribute to Duhamel du Monceau, April 30, 1783
“It's impossible not to admire a person who devoted his life to his ideas.”
This Biography Makes It Clear: The Founder of the Palestinian Popular Front Was Right (April 15, 2018)
p 14
Simon Stevin: Science in the Netherlands around 1600, 1970
Frisch, (1946, p. 1), as quoted in: " Ragnar Frisch 1895-1995 https://www.ssb.no/a/histstat/doc/doc_199403.pdf." O. Bjerkholt, 1994.
1940-60s
“Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.”
Source: The Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of the World's Greatest Philosophers
“Geometry, to which I have devoted my life, is honoured with the title of the Key of Sciences”
Ben Yamen's Song of Geometry (1853)
Context: Geometry, to which I have devoted my life, is honoured with the title of the Key of Sciences; but it is the Key of an ever open door which refuses to be shut, and through which the whole world is crowding, to make free, in unrestrained license, with the precious treasures within, thoughtless both of lock and key, of the door itself, and even of Science, to which it owes such boundless possessions, the New World included. The door is wide open and all may enter, but all do not enter with equal thoughtlessness. There are a few who wonder, as they approach, at the exhaustless wealth, as the sacred shepherd wondered at the burning bush of Horeb, which was ever burning and never consumed. Casting their shoes from off their feet and the world's iron-shod doubts from their understanding, these children of the faithful take their first step upon the holy ground with reverential awe, and advance almost with timidity, fearful, as the signs of Deity break upon them, lest they be brought face to face with the Almighty.
Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra (1070).
"Sense and Sensibility"
The Common Sense of Science (1951)
Tulsidas's philosophical approach, quoted in "Hindu spirituality: Postclassical and modern", p. 80