Origine: Da un'intervista con G.J. Whitrow, citato in G.J. Whitrow, Einstein: The Man and His Achievement, Dover, New York, 1967, p. 83; citato in Albert Einstein, Pensieri di un uomo curioso (The Quotable Einstein), a cura di Alice Calaprice, prefazione di Freeman Dyson, traduzione di Sylvie Coyaud, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milano, 1997, p. 173. ISBN 88-04-47479-3
I. Bernard Cohen Frasi e Citazioni
I. Bernard Cohen: Frasi in inglese
The Triumph of Numbers: How Counting Shaped Modern Life (2005)
The Triumph of Numbers: How Counting Shaped Modern Life (2005)
Origine: The Cambridge Companion to Newton, 2002, p. 1
I. Bernard Cohen, Preface to Opticks by Sir Isaac Newton (1952)
I. Bernard Cohen,
The Birth of a New Physics (1959)
Origine: The Cambridge Companion to Newton, 2002, p. 1
The Birth of a New Physics (1959)
I. Bernard Cohen, Preface to Opticks by Sir Isaac Newton (1952)
This was true not alone of the electrical writings but also in other fields of experimental enquiry. ...[The Opticks] would allow the reader to roam, with great Newton as his guide, through the major unresolved problems of science and even the relation of the whole world of nature to Him who had created it. ...in the Opticks Newton did not adopt the motto... —Hypotheses non fingo; I frame no hypotheses—but, so to speak, let himself go, allowing his imagination full reign and by far exceeding the bounds of experimental evidence.
I. Bernard Cohen, Preface to Opticks by Sir Isaac Newton (1952)