The Two Cultures and the Scientific RevolutionCambridge University Press, 1959 - 58 pages |
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Page 8
... thought distinctly uncivilised and démodé at the time of the Planta- genets ? Wasn't that true of most of the famous twentieth - century writers ? Yeats , Pound , Wynd- ham Lewis , nine out of ten of those who have dominated literary ...
... thought distinctly uncivilised and démodé at the time of the Planta- genets ? Wasn't that true of most of the famous twentieth - century writers ? Yeats , Pound , Wynd- ham Lewis , nine out of ten of those who have dominated literary ...
Page 13
... thought that discovery , that Dickens had been transformed into the type - specimen of literary incomprehensibility , was one of the oddest results of the whole exercise . But of course , in reading him , in reading almost any writer ...
... thought that discovery , that Dickens had been transformed into the type - specimen of literary incomprehensibility , was one of the oddest results of the whole exercise . But of course , in reading him , in reading almost any writer ...
Page 16
... thought highly educated and who have with considerable gusto been expressing their incre- dulity at the illiteracy of scientists . Once or twice I have been provoked and have asked the company how many of them could describe the Second ...
... thought highly educated and who have with considerable gusto been expressing their incre- dulity at the illiteracy of scientists . Once or twice I have been provoked and have asked the company how many of them could describe the Second ...
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Americans applied science Asians and Africans asked atomic atomic bomb attitudes believe capital Chelsea course creative crystallise deal derstand educate ourselves England English educational fact feeling fifty G. H. Hardy going gone grandfather gulf human imaginative individual condition indus industrial revolution industrialisation intel ised kind and number less literary intellectuals literary persons living look lucky major Mathematical Tripos mathematics mean moral Neolithic organisation passionate pattern perhaps plenty poor countries practical problem pure science pure scientists reasons rest rich Russians have judged Rutherford school education scientific culture scientific revolution scientists and engineers scientists and non-scientists seems sense slightly more scientists social specialisation STANFORD UNIVERSITY stratum talent talk teach thing thirty years ago thought tion tists tone-deaf traditional culture transformation tried Tripos true ture tween West western western world whole writers young scientists