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人大考博英语真题模拟阅读理解真题模拟练习精选1-育明考博
中国考博辅导第一品牌
人大考博英语真题模拟阅读理解真题模拟练习精选 1
Method of Scientific Inquiry
Why the inductive and mathematical sciences, after their first
rapid development at the culmination of Greek civilization, advanced
so slowly for two thousand years—and why in the following two hundred
years a knowledge of natural and mathematical science has accumulated,
which so vastly exceeds all that was previously known that these
sciences may be justly regarded as the products of our own times—
are questions which have interested the modern philosopher not less
than the objects with which these sciences are more immediately
conversant. Was it the employment of a new method of research, or in
the exercise of greater virtue in the use of the old methods, that this
singular modern phenomenon had its origin? Was the long period one of
arrested development, and is the modern era one of normal growth? Or
should we ascribe the characteristics of both periods to so-called
historical accidents — to the influence of conjunctions in
circumstances of which no explanation is possible, save in the
omnipotence and wisdom of a guiding Providence?
The explanation which has become commonplace, that the ancients
employed deduction chiefly in their scientific inquiries, while the
moderns employ induction, proves to be too narrow, and fails upon close
examination to point with sufficient distinctness the contrast that
is evident between ancient and modern scientific doctrines and
inquiries. For all knowledge is founded on observation, and proceeds
from this by analysis, by synthesis and analysis, by induction and
deduction, and if possible by verification, or by new appeals to
observation under the guidance of deduction—by steps which are indeed
correlative parts of one method; and the ancient sciences afford
ex
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