“Scientific thought, then, is not momentary; it is not a static instance; it is a process.”
Quote by Jean Piaget
Author
You May Also Like
“I never was lost. I was bewildered right bad once for as much as a week, but not lost.”
Source: The Great Meadow
“Clutter is what happens to things when they become useless but friendly.”
Source: Life in the slow lane: observations on art, architecture, manners and other such spectator sports
“For all its flexibility, television is more a mirror of taste than a shaper of it.”
“In my estimation, the only thing that is more to be guarded against than bad taste is good taste.”
Source: Confessions of a dilettante
“Hope for the best, get ready for the worst, and then take what God chooses to send.”
“Smatterers in learning are the most opinionated.”
Source: A collection of the moral and instructive sentiments, maxims, cautions, and reflexions, contained in the histories of Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles Grandison: Digested under proper heads, with references to the volume, ...
“The Cause of Women is generally the Cause of Virtue.”
Source: Selected letters of Samuel Richardson
