Thumbnail of Adam Sedgwick
Adam Sedgwick
(22 Mar 1785 - 27 Jan 1873)

English geologist.


Science Quotes by Adam Sedgwick (1)

There is a moral or metaphysical part of nature as well as a physical. A man who denies this is deep in the mire of folly. 'Tis the crown and glory of organic science that it does through final cause, link material and moral; and yet does not allow us to mingle them in our first conception of laws, and our classification of such laws, whether we consider one side of nature or the other. You have ignored this link; and, if I do not mistake your meaning, you have done your best in one or two pregnant cases to break it. Were it possible (which, thank God, it is not) to break it, humanity, in my mind, would suffer a damage that might brutalize it, and sink the human race into a lower grade of degradation than any into which it has fallen since its written records tell us of its history.
— Adam Sedgwick
Letter to Charles Darwin (Nov 1859). In Charles Darwin and Francis Darwin (ed.), Charles Darwin: His Life Told in an Autobiographical Chapter, and in a Selected Series of His Published Letters (1892), 217.
See also:  |  Cause (54)  |  Classification (36)  |  Crown (2)  |  Degradation (3)  |  Folly (4)  |  Glory (3)  |  History (69)  |  Human Race (15)  |  Humanity (11)  |  Ignore (4)  |  Law (145)  |  Meaning (11)  |  Mingle (2)  |  Mistake (6)  |  Moral (14)  |  Nature (255)  |  Organic (2)  |  Record (4)  |  Science (463)



Quotes by others about Adam Sedgwick (1)

You must not say that this cannot be, or that that is contrary to nature. You do not know what Nature is, or what she can do; and nobody knows; not even Sir Roderick Murchison, or Professor Huxley, or Mr. Darwin, or Professor Faraday, or Mr. Grove, or any other of the great men whom good boys are taught to respect. They are very wise men; and you must listen respectfully to all they say: but even if they should say, which I am sure they never would, 'That cannot exist. That is contrary to nature,' you must wait a little, and see; for perhaps even they may be wrong.
The Water-babies (1886), 81.
See also:  |  Charles Darwin (171)  |  Evolution (237)  |  Michael Faraday (40)  |  Thomas Henry Huxley (63)  |  Hypothesis (96)  |  Sir Roderick Impey Murchison (8)  |  Sir Richard Owen (2)  |  Proof (63)


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