Without prejudice and without fear, philosophy would tear the mantle from "the veiled statue of Sais," and attain a full vision of the truth.


The Wonders of Life: A Popular Study of Biological Philosophy, Chapter I (p. 1), Harper & Brothers Publishers. 1905


Without prejudice and without fear, philosophy would tear the mantle from the veiled statue of Sais, and attain a full vision of the truth.

Without prejudice and without fear, philosophy would tear the mantle from the veiled statue of Sais, and attain a full vision of the truth.

Without prejudice and without fear, philosophy would tear the mantle from the veiled statue of Sais, and attain a full vision of the truth.

Without prejudice and without fear, philosophy would tear the mantle from the veiled statue of Sais, and attain a full vision of the truth.