THAT the PRINCIPIA of Newton should have remained so generally unknown in this country to the present day is a somewhatremarkable fact ; because the name of the author, learned withthe very elements of science, is revered at every hearth-stonewhere knowledge and virtue are of chief esteem, while, abroad,in all the high places of the land, the character which that namerecalls is held up as the noblest illustration of what MAN may be,and may do, in the possession and manifestation of pre-eminentin
...tellectual and moral worth ; because the work is celebrated, not only in the history of one career and one mind, but in the history of all achievement and human reason itself; because of the spirit of inquiry, which has been aroused, and which, in pursuing its searchings, is not always satisfied with stopping short of the foun tain-head of any given truth ; and, finally, because of the earnest endeavour that has been and is constantly going on, in many sections of the Republic, to elevate the popular standard of education and give to scientific and other efforts a higher and a better aim. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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