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Whyte, Alexander, 1836-1921

"Sir Thomas Browne and his 'Religio Medici' an Appreciation"

The
Introductory Book contains the best analysis and exposition of the famous
Baconian Idols that has ever been written. That Book of the
_Pseudodoxia_ is full of the profoundest philosophical principles set
forth in the stateliest English. The students of Whately and Mill, as
well as of Bacon, will greatly enjoy this part of the _Pseudodoxia_. _The
Grammar of Assent_, also, would seem to have had some of its deepest
roots in the same powerful, original, and suggestive Book. For its day
the _Pseudodoxia_ is a perfect encyclopaedia of scientific, and
historical, and literary, and even Biblical criticism: the _Pseudodoxia_
and the _Miscellany Tracts_ taken together. Some of the most powerful
passages that ever fell from Sir Thomas Browne's pen are to be come upon
in the Introduction to the _Pseudodoxia_. And, with all our immense
advances in method and in discipline: in observation and in discovery: no
true student of nature and of man can afford to neglect the extraordinary
catalogue of things which are so characteristically treated of in Sir
Thomas Browne's great, if, nowadays, out-grown book. For one thing, and
that surely not a small thing, we see on every page of the _Pseudodoxia_
the labour, as Dr.


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