J. Arthur Thomson quotes:

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  • There is no counting the unsolved problems of Natural History.

  • All Nature bristles with the marks of interrogation-among the grass and the petals of flowers, amidst the feathers of birds and the hairs of mammals, on mountain and moorland, in sea and sky-everywhere. It is one of the joys of life to discover those marks of interrogation, these unsolved and half-solved problems and try to answer their questions.

  • The Doctrine of Evolution states the fact that the present is the child of the past and the parent of the future.

  • The most powerful factors in the world are clear ideas in the minds of energetic men of good will.

  • Was it not the great philosopher and mathematician Leibnitz who said that the more knowledge advances the more it becomes possible to condense it into little books?

  • The man who has grit enough to bring about the afforestation or the irrigation of a country is not less worthy of honor than its conqueror.

  • The chief end of science is to make things clear, the educative aim is to foster the inquisitive spirit.

  • A prolonged war in which a nation takes part is bound to impoverish the breed, since the character of the breed depends on the men who are left.

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