Top 8 Quotes & Sayings by William Ian Beardmore Beveridge

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Australian author William Ian Beardmore Beveridge.
Last updated on September 19, 2024.
William Ian Beardmore Beveridge

William Ian Beardmore (WIB) Beveridge (1908-2006) was an Australian animal pathologist and director of the Institute of Animal Pathology, University of Cambridge. He was born on 23 April 1908 in Junee, New South Wales, Australia, and died on 14 August 2006. He was the author of The Art of Scientific Investigation in 1957, and Influenza, the Last Great Plague, in 1977.

Elaborate apparatus plays an important part in the science of to-day, but I sometimes wonder if we are not inclined to forget that the most important instrument in research must always be the mind of man.
Cultivate an intellectual habit of subordinating one's opinions and wishes to objective evidence and a reverence for things as they really are.
Paradoxical as it may at first appear, the fact is that, as W. H. George has said, scientific research is an art, not a science. — © William Ian Beardmore Beveridge
Paradoxical as it may at first appear, the fact is that, as W. H. George has said, scientific research is an art, not a science.
No one believes an hypothesis except its originator but everyone believes an experiment except the experimenter. Most people are ready to believe something based on experiment but the experimenter knows the many little things that could have gone wrong in the experiment.
When adults first become conscious of something new, they usually either attack or try to escape from it ... Attack includes such mild forms as ridicule, and escape includes merely putting out of mind.
Hypothesis is a toll which can cause trouble if not used properly. We must be ready to abandon our hypothesis as soon as it is shown to be inconsistent with the facts.
Many discoveries must have been stillborn or smothered at birth. We know only those which survived.
The Imagination merely enables us to wander into the darkness of the unknown where, by the dim light of the knowledge we carry, we may glimpse something that seems of interest. But when we bring it out and examine it more closely it usually proves to be only trash whose glitter had caught our attention. Imagination is at once the source of all hope and inspiration but also of frustration. To forget this is to court despair.
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