(Hippocrates,
On Ancient Medicine, Adams edition, Vol. 1, 1849, p. 168.)
THE true and lawful goal of the sciences is none other than this: that
human life be endowed with new discoveries and powers. (Francis Bacon,
Novum Organum, Aphorisms, LXXXI, Spedding's translation.)
A GOLDEN thread has run throughout the history of the world, consecutive
and continuous, the work of the best men in successive ages. From point
to point it still runs, and when near you feel it as the clear and
bright and searchingly irresistible light which Truth throws forth when
great minds conceive it. (Walter Moxon, Pilocereus Senilis and Other
Papers, 1887, p. 4.)
FOR the mind depends so much on the temperament and disposition of the
bodily organs that, if it is possible to find a means of rendering men
wiser and cleverer than they have hitherto been, I believe that it is in
medicine that it must be sought. It is true that the medicine which is
now in vogue contains little of which the utility is remarkable; but,
without having any intention of decrying it, I am sure that there is
no one, even among those who make its study a profession, who does not
confess that all that men know is almost nothing in comparison with
what remains to be known; and that we could be free of an infinitude
of maladies both of body and mind, and even also possibly of the
infirmities of age, if we had sufficient knowledge of their causes,
and of all the remedies with which nature has provided us.
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