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65 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1964
It is a profound and necessary truth that the deep things in science are not found because they are useful; they are found because it was possible to find them.
I believe that the availability of instruments, the availability of ideas or concepts - not alway but often mathematical - are more likely to determine where great changes occur in our pciture of the world than are the requirements of man.
The experience of seeing how our thought and our words and our ideas have been confined by the limitation of our experience is one which is salutary and is in a certain sense good for a man's morals as well as good for his pleasure. It seems to us [scientists] that this is an opening up of the human spirit , avoiding its provincialism and narrowness.
[A] great love of adventure, so that you look for new things and changed circumstances, look far into the sky, look close into matter, do all sorts of things that take you away from the familiar human experience. That lies on the one hand, and on the other is a great adherence to to such order and clarity as has already been attained.
Finally, I think we believe that when we see an opportunity , we have the duty to work for the growth of that international community of knowledge and understanding with our colleagues in other lands , with our colleagues in competing, antagonistic, possibly hostile lands, with our colleagues and with others with whom we have any community f interest, any community of professional, of human, of political concern. [...] We think of this as our contribution to the making of a world which is varied and cherishes variety, which is free and cherishes freedom, and which is freely changing to adapt to the inevitable needs of change in the twentieth century and all centuries to come, but a world which, with all its variety, freedom, and change, is without nation states armed for war and above all, a world without war.
