If an idea presents itself to us, we must not reject it simply because it does not agree with the logical deductions of a reigning theory.


Translated by Henry Copley Greene, An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine


If an idea presents itself to us, we must not reject it simply because it does not agree with the logical deductions of a reigning theory.

If an idea presents itself to us, we must not reject it simply because it does not agree with the logical deductions of a reigning theory.

If an idea presents itself to us, we must not reject it simply because it does not agree with the logical deductions of a reigning theory.

If an idea presents itself to us, we must not reject it simply because it does not agree with the logical deductions of a reigning theory.