George Iles quotes
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“Doubt is the beginning, not the end, of wisdom.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“A superstition is a premature explanation that overstays its time.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
#Statistics Quotes #Superstitions Quotes #Explanation Quotes
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“They will listen with both ears to what is said by the men just a step or two ahead of them, who stand nearest to them, and within arm's reach. A guide ceases to be of any use when he strides so far ahead as to be hidden by the curvature of the earth.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1917). “Choosing Books”
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“No gun is perfectly true. So the marksman, that he may hit the bull's-eye, points elsewhere.”
-- George Iles -
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“Ten builders rear an arch, each in turn lifting it higher; but it is the tenth man, who drops in the keystone, who hears our huzzas.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“A man's own addition to what he learns is cement to bind an otherwise loose heap of stones into a structure of unity, strength, and use.”
-- George Iles -
“A tree nowhere offers a straight line or a regular curve, but who doubts that root, trunk, boughs, and leaves embody geometry?”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Form may be of more account than substance. A lens of ice will focus a solar beam to a blaze.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Nothing cools so fast as undue enthusiasm. Water that has boiled freezes sooner than any other.”
-- George Iles -
“Educated folk keep to one another's company too much, leaving other people much like milk skimmed of its cream.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“A calculating engine is one of the most intricate forms of mechanism, a telegraph key one of the simplest. But compare their value.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“We despair of changing the habits of men, still we would alter institutions, the habits of millions of men.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Nature is full of by-ends. A moth feeds on a petal, in a moment the pollen caught on its breast will be wedding this blossom to another in the next county.”
-- George Iles -
“Discovery begins by finding the discoverer.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“When a learner, in the fullness of his powers, comes to great truths unstaled by premature familiarity, he rejoices in the lateness of his lessons.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Evolution pays and that is why there is evolution”
-- George Iles -
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“To render aid to the worthless is sheer waste. Rain does not freshen the Dead Sea, but only enables it to dissolve more salt.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Dumbness and silence are two different things.”
-- George Iles -
“Is any knowledge worthless? Try to think of an example.”
-- George Iles -
“Boundaries which mark off one field of science from another are purely artificial, are set up only for temporary convenience. Let chemists and physicists dig deep enough, and they reach common ground.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Error held as truth has much the effect of truth. In politics and religion this fact upsets many confident predictions.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Some young folks have wind-fall minds, prematurely detached from the tree of knowledge for a life-long sourness and pettiness.”
-- George Iles -
“When we try to imagine a chaos we fail. ... In its very fiber the mind is an order and refuses to build a chaos.”
-- George Iles -
“Ignorance may find a truth on its doorstep that erudition vainly seeks in the stars.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Let truth be a banner big enough to hide the man who holds it up.”
-- George Iles -
“Truth is better disengaged from error than torn from it.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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“Degree is much: the whole Atlantic might be lukewarm and never boil us a potato.”
-- George IlesSource : George Iles (1918). “Canadian Stories”
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