Lighthouse Quotes (2)

...learning chiefly in mathematical sciences can so swallow up and fix one's thought, as to possess it entirely for some time; but when that amusement is over, nature will return, and be where it was, being rather diverted than overcome by such speculations.
An Exposition of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England (1850), 154
See also:  |  Biography (152)  |  Sir Isaac Newton (82)  |  Observation (142)  |  John Smeaton (5)  |  Sundial (3)

The history of men of science has one peculiar advantage, as it shows the importance of little things in producing great results. Smeaton learned his principle of constructing a lighthouse, by noticing the trunk of a tree to be diminished from a curve to a cyclinder ... and Newton, turning an old box into a water-clock, or the yard of a house into a sundial, are examples of those habits of patient observation which scientific biography attractively recommends.
Pleasures, Objects, and Advantages of Literature (1855), 129.
See also:  |  Biography (152)  |  Sir Isaac Newton (82)  |  Observation (142)  |  John Smeaton (5)  |  Sundial (3)

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