Auguste Comte Quote

If biological phenomena are incomparably more complex than those of any preceding science, the study of them admits of the most extensive assemblage of intellectual means (many of them new) and develops human faculties hitherto inactive, or known only in a rudimentary state.


The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte (Volume 2), Book V, Chapter I (p. 12)


If biological phenomena are incomparably more complex than those of any preceding science, the study of them admits of the most extensive assemblage...

If biological phenomena are incomparably more complex than those of any preceding science, the study of them admits of the most extensive assemblage...

If biological phenomena are incomparably more complex than those of any preceding science, the study of them admits of the most extensive assemblage...

If biological phenomena are incomparably more complex than those of any preceding science, the study of them admits of the most extensive assemblage...