T. H. Huxley quote:
I have said that the man of science is the sworn interpreter of nature in
the high court of reason. But of what avail is his honest speech, if
ignorance is the assessor of the judge, and prejudice the foreman of the
jury? I hardly know of a great physical truth, whose universal reception
has not been preceded by an epoch in which most estimable persons have
maintained that the phenomena investigated were directly dependent on the
Divine Will, and that the attempt to investigate them was not only
futile, but blasphemous. And there is wonderful tenacity of life about
this sort of opposition to physical science. Crushed and maimed in every
battle, it yet seems never to be slain; and after a hundred defeats it is
at this day as rampant, though happily not so mischievous, as in the time
of Galileo.
- Lecture at Royal Institution, 10 February 1860
- Quote from Thomas Henry Huxley Jed Rothwell
- RE: Quote from Thomas Henry Huxley Michael Foster

