On his seventieth birthday (1926); as quoted in The Liberal Imagination (1950) by Lionel Trilling 
1920s
                                    
“The scientific method I was closest to was the Linnaean: discover, collect, examine.”
            30. 
För levande och döda (For the Living and the Dead) 1996
        
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Tomas Tranströmer 6
Swedish poet, psychologist and translator 1931–2015Related quotes
“A Single Spark Can Start a Prairie Fire” (January 5, 1930)
Source: Conversations with Gabriel García Márquez
                                        
                                        C. West Churchman, "Operations research as a profession"  (1970); cited in Arjang A. Assad, Saul I. Gass (2011) Profiles in Operations Research: Pioneers and Innovators. p. 181 
1960s - 1970s
                                    
                                        
                                        Religion and Science (1935), Ch. IX: Science of Ethics. 
1930s 
Variant: "What science cannot tell us, mankind cannot know." (Attributed to Russell in Ted Peters' Cosmos As Creation: Theology and Science in Consonance [1989], p. 14, with a note that it was "told [to] a BBC audience [earlier this century]").
                                    
Source: The Evolution of Civilizations (1961) (Second Edition 1979), Chapter 1, Scientific Method and the Social Sciences, p. 33
1940s, "Autobiographical Notes" (1949)
“Buddha's teachings are scientific methods to solve the problems of all living beings permanently.”
Modern Buddhism: The Path of Compassion and Wisdom (2011)
                                        
                                         "Our Knowledge of the Causes of the Phenomena of Organic Nature" (1863) http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/CE2/Phen.html 
1860s
                                    
                                        
                                        Homilies of Science p. 15 
Homilies of Science 1892 
Context: Some imagine that science is limited to the lower sorts of natural facts only. Religious and moral facts have been too little heeded by our scientists. Thus people came to think that science and religion move in two different spheres. That is not so. The facts of our soul-life must be investigated and stated with scientific accuracy, and our clergy should be taught to purify religion with the criticism of scientific methods. They need not fear for their religious ideals. So far as they are true, and their moral kernel is true, they will not suffer in the crucible of science. Religion will not lose one iota of its grandeur, if it is based upon a scientific foundation; all that it will lose is the errors that are connected with religion and the sooner they are lost the better for us.