Thursday, October 25, 2007

'Leave now the puny wish, the girlish feeling,



Oh, thrust it far behind thee! Give thou proof
Thou"rt the daughter of the Mighty,--his
Who where he moves creates the wonderful
'Leave now the puny wish, the girlish feeling,
Oh, thrust it far behind thee! Give thou proof
Thou"rt the daughter of the Mighty,--his
Who where he moves creates the wonderful.
Meet and disarm necessity by choice.'




If science produces so much wealth, is there no contrivance



whereby we can cause a small fraction of this wealth to return
automatically to science and to furnish munitions of war for
fresh conquests of nature? A very small investment in research
often produces colossal returns
If science produces so much wealth, is there no contrivance
whereby we can cause a small fraction of this wealth to return
automatically to science and to furnish munitions of war for
fresh conquests of nature? A very small investment in research
often produces colossal returns. In 1911 the income of the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry was only
$21,000. In 1913 the income of the Institute for Experimental
Therapy at Frankfort, where '606' was discovered, was only
$20,000; that of the Imperial Institute for Medical Research at
Petrograd was $95,000, and that of the National Physical
Laboratory in England (not exclusively devoted to research) was
$40,000. Yet these are among the most famous research
institutions in the world and have achieved results of
world-wide fame and inestimable value both from a financial
standpoint and from the standpoint of the physical, moral and
spiritual welfare of mankind.