
Source: 1950's, Interview by William Wright, Summer 1950, pp. 139-140
The First Sex, ch. 22 - Woman in the Aquarian Age, Putnam (1971).
Source: 1950's, Interview by William Wright, Summer 1950, pp. 139-140
“We are a moderate, pragmatic people, more comfortable with practice than theory.”
Speech in reply to Addresses from both Houses of Parliament in Westminster Hall in the year of Her Golden Jubilee (30 April 2002)
“Society is a self-regulating mechanism for preventing the fulfilment of its members.”
The Decline and Fall of Science (1976)
Lin Chuan (2017) cited in " Taipei not adverse to China ties: Lin http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2017/05/09/2003670233" on Taipei Times, 9 May 2017.
1820s, Signs of the Times (1829)
Preface (8 May 1686)
Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687)
Context: The ancients considered mechanics in a twofold respect; as rational, which proceeds accurately by demonstration, and practical. To practical mechanics all the manual arts belong, from which mechanics took its name. But as artificers do not work with perfect accuracy, it comes to pass that mechanics is so distinguished from geometry, that what is perfectly accurate is called geometrical; what is less so is called mechanical. But the errors are not in the art, but in the artificers. He that works with less accuracy is an imperfect mechanic: and if any could work with perfect accuracy, he would be the most perfect mechanic of all; for the description of right lines and circles, upon which geometry is founded, belongs to mechanics. Geometry does not teach us to draw these lines, but requires them to be drawn; for it requires that the learner should first be taught to describe these accurately, before he enters upon geometry; then it shows how by these operations problems may be solved.
Collected Works, Vol. 33, pp. 227–36.
Collected Works
1820s, Signs of the Times (1829)
“Individuality and Modernity,” Essays on Individuality (Philadelphia: 1958), p. 66.