
“Nothing is more damaging to a new truth than an old error.”
Maxim 715, trans. Stopp
Maxims and Reflections (1833)
Source: Foreword, Initiation, The Perfecting of Man (1923)
“Nothing is more damaging to a new truth than an old error.”
Maxim 715, trans. Stopp
Maxims and Reflections (1833)
"He" - Written 11 August 1925; first published in Weird Tales, Vol. 8, No. 3 (September 1926)
Fiction
[Consolmagno, Guy, Mueller, Paul, https://www.google.com/books?id=lf5vDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA16, 9780804136952, Would You Baptize an Extraterrestrial?: And Other Questions from the Astronomers' In-Box at the Vatican Observatory, 16, 2014, Image]
"Searching for the window into nature's soul" http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian/issues97/feb97/golds.html Smithsonian magazine (February 1997)
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 284.
“The truth is that history constantly presents new problems in the guise of old.”
Source: Barbarian Sentiments - How The American Century Ends (1989), Chapter 5, Nationalism, p. 155.
This Business of Living (1935-1950)