Under this new influence an army of young men took up every promising line of scientific investigation in every land.
For the view of Peter Damian and others through the Middle Ages as to the futility of scientific investigation, see citations in Eicken, Geschichte und System der mittelalterlichen Weltanschauung, chap.
Comte, limit the sphere of scientific investigation to Laws of Phenomena, and speak of the inquiry into causes as vain and futile.
Because the theory, being plausible at the time when such chemical theories were popular, gained a certain recognition and was accepted without scientific investigation.
In fact, so far as we can learn, there was no scientific investigation of the problem until Randolph’s experiments in 1884.
All of these facts, which taken together constitute a very remarkable and convincing piece of scientific investigation, permit of but one conclusion.
Thus, by the full freedom which religious interest gives to scientific investigation, we are well prepared to treat with entire impartiality the question as to the position of each of the Darwinian theories in reference to theism.
Comté, limit the sphere of scientific investigation to Laws of Phenomena, and speak of the inquiry into causes as vain and futile.
And Huxley quite as emphatically points out: "The method of scientific investigation is nothing but the expression of the necessary mode of working of the human mind.
Truth and full reality belong not to the field of scientific investigation.
The method of "multiple working hypotheses," urged as highly important in scientific investigation, is no less essential in the moral field.
If matter be infinite, and if it belongs to the field of scientific knowledge, then the infinite and incomprehensible belong, also, to the domain of scientific investigation.
Hence the incomprehensible is not to be excluded from the field of scientific investigation.
A man making his appearance among us as a lecturer, condemning all the sciences, presenting to the public mind the hundred and one old false ideas known in the history of scientific investigation, would be hissed out of literary circles.
So much has been ascertained by scientific investigation of the winds, that we can now distinctly map out the great belts or currents which pass right round the world.
These hurricanes or cyclones, although in reality whirlwinds, are so large that man's eye cannot measure them, and it is only by scientific investigation that we have arrived at the knowledge of the fact.
But the primordial man could not wait for the revelations of scientific investigation: he must vault at once to a final solution of all scientific problems.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "scientific investigation" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.