Popular Science Monthly - Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86 by Anonymous
page 220 of 485 (45%)
page 220 of 485 (45%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
there would only have been Galileo, Newton and a few other
contemporaries, in the eighteenth they could almost have been counted on the fingers, and they have not crowded the nineteenth.'[7] [7] "Inventors at Work," Iles, Doubleday Page, 1906. The first thing we have to do is to discover such men, to learn to know them or suspect them when we meet them or their works. The next is to give them moral and financial recognition, and the means of doing their work. Our procedure in the past has been the reverse of this. I quote from a letter of Kepler to his friend Moestlen: 'I supplicate you, if there is a situation vacant at Tubingen, do what you can to obtain it for me, and let me know the prices of bread, wine and other necessaries of life, for my wife is not accustomed to live on beans.' The founder of comparative psychology, J. H. Fabre, that "incomparable observer" as Darwin characterized him, is now over ninety years of age, and until very recently was actually suffering from poverty. All his life his work was stunted and crippled by poverty, and countless researches which he was the one human being qualified by genius and experience to undertake, remain to this day unperformed because he never could command the meager necessary equipment of apparatus. |
|