"From the point of view of the physicist, a theory of matter
is a policy rather than a creed; its object is to connect or co-ordinate
apparently diverse phenomena, and above all to suggest, stimulate and direct
experiment. It ought to furnish a compass which, if followed, will lead to
observer further and further into previously unexplored regions."
"It [a theory] ought to furnish a compass which, if followed, will lead the observer further and further into previously unexplored regions. Whether these regions will be barren or fertile experience alone will decide; but, at any rate, one who is guided in this way will travel onward in a definite direction, and will not wander aimlessly to and fro." (Sir Joseph J Thomson, "The Corpuscular Theory of Matter", 1907)
"Nature is far more wonderful and unconventional than anything we can evolve from our inner consciousness. The most far-reaching generalizations which may influence philosophy as well as revolutionize physics, may be suggested, nay, forced on the mind by the discovery of some trivial phenomenon." (Joseph J Thomson, "The Atomic Theory", 1914)
"It [relativity] was not a discovery of an outlying island,
but of a whole continent of new scientific ideas of the greatest importance to
some of the most fundamental questions connected with physics." (Joseph J
Thomson, "Eclipse Showed Gravity Variation: Hailed as Epochmaking", The New York
Times, 1919)
"If the modern conception of the atom is correct the barrier
which separated physics from chemistry has been removed." (Sir Joseph J Thomson, "The Electron in Chemistry", 1923)
"A great discovery is not a terminus, but an avenue leading to regions hitherto unknown. We climb to the top of the peak and find that it reveals to us another higher than any we have yet seen, and so it goes on. The additions to our knowledge of physics made in a generation do not get smaller or less fundamental or less revolutionary, as one generation succeeds another. The sum of our knowledge is not like what mathematicians call a convergent series […] where the study of a few terms may give the general properties of the whole. Physics corresponds rather to the other type of series called divergent, where the terms which are added one after another do not get smaller and smaller, and where the conclusions we draw from the few terms we know, cannot be trusted to be those we should draw if further knowledge were at our disposal." (Sir Joseph J Thomson)
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