Henry Crampton Quote

Like the human and other sciences, zoology has arisen from that vague uncoordinated and unresolved mass of knowledge, the Natural Philosophy of not very remote times, which undertook to comprehend all there was of nature and thought.


Lectures on Science, Philosophy and Art, 1907-1908, Zoology (p. 5), The Columbia University Press. 1908


Like the human and other sciences, zoology has arisen from that vague uncoordinated and unresolved mass of knowledge, the Natural Philosophy of not...

Like the human and other sciences, zoology has arisen from that vague uncoordinated and unresolved mass of knowledge, the Natural Philosophy of not...

Like the human and other sciences, zoology has arisen from that vague uncoordinated and unresolved mass of knowledge, the Natural Philosophy of not...

Like the human and other sciences, zoology has arisen from that vague uncoordinated and unresolved mass of knowledge, the Natural Philosophy of not...