
Source: Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences, 1883, p. 147
Source: The Character of Physical Law (1965), chapter 1, “The Law of Gravitation,” p. 15: video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3mhkYbznBk&t=12m45s
Source: Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences, 1883, p. 147
“Objective evidence is the ultimate authority. Recorders may lie, but Nature is incapable of it.”
Ch 19
A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959), Fiat Lux
conjecture
in his Nobel Lecture http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1996/curl-lecture.html, December 7, 1996, Dawn of the Fullerenes: Experiment and Conjecture
Source: Against Interpretation and Other Essays (1966), p. 6
“Man is the interpreter of nature, science the right interpretation.”
Aphorism 17.
Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences (1840)
Address to the Society for Psychical Research (1897)
Context: I see no good reason why any man of scientific mind should shut his eyes to our work or deliberately stand aloof from it. Our Proceedings are, of course, not exactly parallel to the Proceedings of a society dealing with a long-established branch of science. In every form of research there must be a beginning. We own to much that is tentative, much that may turn out erroneous. But it is thus, and thus only, that each science in turn takes its stand. I venture to assert that both in actual careful record of new and important facts, and in suggestiveness, our society's work and publications will form no unworthy preface to a profounder science both of man, of nature, and of "worlds not realized" than this planet has yet known.