THE NATURE OF THE GROUNDWORK OF SCIENCE
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THE various preliminary inquiries and considerations,
which it has appeared to us necessary to make or
entertain before addressing ourselves to the main question,
having been now disposed of, we will endeavour to draw
out what appears to us to be the answer to that main
question the question, namely, what is the groundwork of
science ?
As we said in the beginning of this book, we selected
for our title the phrase "groundwork of science" because
its object was to examine the essential nature, of the efforts
of scientific workers, of the tools they have to use, as well
as of that which constitutes their field of labour.
The question, then, as to what is the nature of the ground-
work of science resolves itself into the three subordinate
questions :
(1) What is the nature of that field wherein scientific
labourers have to work : what is the matter of science ?
(2) What are the tools which it is absolutely necessary
for such workers to make use of in their labour ?
(3) What must be the nature and qualifications of the
workers themselves in order that they may be able to obtain
good results from their labour ?
Assuming the validity of our contention that we possess an
intuition of the extended, we have seen that the matter
of science consists of two divisions : (A) a division made up
298
THE various preliminary inquiries and considerations,
which it has appeared to us necessary to make or
entertain before addressing ourselves to the main question,
having been now disposed of, we will endeavour to draw
out what appears to us to be the answer to that main
question the question, namely, what is the groundwork of
science ?
As we said in the beginning of this book, we selected
for our title the phrase "groundwork of science" because
its object was to examine the essential nature, of the efforts
of scientific workers, of the tools they have to use, as well
as of that which constitutes their field of labour.
The question, then, as to what is the nature of the ground-
work of science resolves itself into the three subordinate
questions :
(1) What is the nature of that field wherein scientific
labourers have to work : what is the matter of science ?
(2) What are the tools which it is absolutely necessary
for such workers to make use of in their labour ?
(3) What must be the nature and qualifications of the
workers themselves in order that they may be able to obtain
good results from their labour ?
Assuming the validity of our contention that we possess an
intuition of the extended, we have seen that the matter
of science consists of two divisions : (A) a division made up
298