Robert Boyle Quote

If the omniscient author of nature knew that the study of his works tends to make men disbelieve his Being or Attributes, he would not have given them so many invitations to study and contemplate Nature.


'Some considerations touching the usefulness of experimental philosophy' (1663). Quoted in Peter Gay, The Enlightenment (1977)


If the omniscient author of nature knew that the study of his works tends to make men disbelieve his Being or Attributes, he would not have given...

If the omniscient author of nature knew that the study of his works tends to make men disbelieve his Being or Attributes, he would not have given...

If the omniscient author of nature knew that the study of his works tends to make men disbelieve his Being or Attributes, he would not have given...

If the omniscient author of nature knew that the study of his works tends to make men disbelieve his Being or Attributes, he would not have given...