The Chicago Guide to Communicating Science, second edition, University of Chicago press, 2017, page 302 ISBN 978-0-226-14450-4.
“Scientific truth, like puristic truth, must come about by controversy. Personally this view is abhorrent to me. It seems to mean that scientific truth must transcend the individual, that the best hope of science lies in its greatest minds being often brilliantly and determinedly wrong, but in opposition, with some third, eclectically minded, middle-of-the-road nonentity seizing the prize while the great fight for it, running off with it, and sticking it into a textbook for sophomores written from no point of view and in defense of nothing whatsoever. I hate this view, for it is not dramatic and it is not fair; and yet I believe that it is the verdict of the history of science.”
Source: History, psychology, and science. 1963, p. 68; Paper "The Psychology of Coutroversy", (1929)
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Edwin Boring 20
American psychologist 1886–1968Related quotes

“The truth is, a great mind must be androgynous.”
1 September 1832
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1960s–1970s, Nobel Banquet Speech (1974)
“The sundering of a scientific from a poetic truth is the primal mark of the administrative mind.”
Source: Social Amnesia: A Critique of Conformist Psychology from Adler to Laing (1975), p. 9

Methods of Study in Natural History (1863), ch. 4, p. 42 https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015065771407;view=1up;seq=56

AIKMAN, Duncan, New York Times Magazine, February 19, 1933, p. 3 http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A02E7DA1539E033A2575AC1A9649C946294D6CF&nytmobile=0&legacy=true

N.Y. Herald Tribune (September 9, 1956)

Source: Milennial Dawn, Vol. III: Thy Kingdom Come (1891), pp. 314-5.