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148 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1901




“just as it is written in the tongue, the stomach, and mouth of the bee that it must make honey, so it is written in our eyes, our ears, our nerves, our marrow, in every lobe of our head, that we must make cerebral substance; nor is there need that we should divine the purpose this substance shall serve” (216).
“We know nothing of nature’s aims, which for us is the truth that dominates every other. But for the very love of this truth, and to preserve in our soul the ardor we need for its search, it behooves us to deem it great. And if we should find one day that we have been on a wrong road, that this aim is incoherent and petty, we shall have discovered its pettiness be means of the very zeal its presumed grandeur has created within us“ (172)