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" The classification of facts, the recognition of their sequence and relative significance is the function of science, and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific... "
Transactions of the American Society for Steel Treating - Page 387
by American Society for Steel Treating - 1923
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The Grammar of Science

Karl Pearson - 1900 - 586 pages
...individual mind — essentially sum up the aim and method of modern science. The scientific man l1as above all things to strive at self-elimination in...and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind....
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The Grammar of Science

Karl Pearson - 1900 - 598 pages
...and method of modern science. The scientific man has above all things to strive at self -elimination in his judgments, to provide an argument which is...recognition of their sequence and relative significance is tlie function of science, and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal...
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Progress of Science in the Century

John Arthur Thomson - 1903 - 582 pages
...preoccupies the energies and attention, scientific enquiry- has hardly begun. As Mr. Pearson says, " The classification of facts, the recognition of their...relative significance is the function of science." To put it more concretely, the student of biology, for instance, has hardly caught on at all unless...
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The Nature-study Review: Devoted to All Phases of Nature-study in ..., Volume 1

1905 - 296 pages
...upon the basis of this classification essentially sums up the aim and method of modern science. . . . The classification of facts, the recognition of their...relative significance, is the function of science." Mivart, in his " Groundwork of Science," refers to science as " ordered and systematic knowledge."...
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Introduction to Political Science: A Treatise on the Origin, Nature ...

James Wilford Garner - 1910 - 642 pages
..."Grammar of Science," p. 6, "essentially sum up the aim and method of modern science." Again, he says, "the classification of facts, the recognition of their...relative significance, is the function of science." POL. SCI. — i or sequence which is the result of fixed laws, though less immutable, to be sure, than...
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The Grammar of Science, Part 1

Karl Pearson - 1911 - 430 pages
...methods of eliminating individual bias ; it ought to be one of the best training grounds for citizenship. The classification of facts and the formation of absolute...and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind....
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The Grammar of science

Karl Pearson - 1911 - 426 pages
...methods of eliminating individual bias ; it ought to be one of the best training grounds for citizenship. The classification of facts and the formation of absolute...and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind....
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The Grammar of Science

Karl Pearson - 1911 - 420 pages
...this classification—judgments independent of the idiosyncrasies of the individual mind—essentially sum up the aim and method of modern science. The scientific...and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind....
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Introduction to Science

John Arthur Thomson - 1911 - 276 pages
...mere opinion, depends on the elimination of the subjective element. As Prof. Karl Pearson says : " The scientific man has above all things to strive...the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts, unbiassed by personal feeling, is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind...
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The Grammar of Science: Physical

Karl Pearson - 1911 - 426 pages
...individual mind as for his own. • The classification oj facts, the recognition of their seqztence and relative significance is the function of science,...and the habit of forming a judgment upon these facts unbiassed by personal feeling is characteristic of what may be termed the scientific frame of mind....
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