Physics
Scientific paper
Apr 1932
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1932natur.129..508w&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 129, Issue 3257, pp. 508-509 (1932).
Physics
Scientific paper
I. IT is difficult to see just what is the meaning attached to `direct contact' in the statement that ``we have no means of getting into direct contact with them [physical objects]'' (``The Decline of Determinism'', NATURE, Feb. 13, p. 235). For, the fact that the sense-organs merely reflect objects is not a modern discovery: it was the basis of Francis Bacon's inductive philosophy. ``Our method is continually to dwell among things soberly; without abstracting or setting the understanding farther from them than makes their images meet.'' ``For however men may amuse themselves, and admire or almost adore the mind; it is certain that, like an irregular glass, it alters the rays of things....'' ``The capital precept for the whole conduct is this, that the eye of the mind be never taken off from things themselves; but receive their images truly as they are.'' ``The mind is like a glass, capable of the image of the universe...as the eye to receive the light.'' (Preliminaries, ``De Augmentis Scientiarum''.)
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