428 DARWINISM AND THE PROBLEMS OF LIFE 



But science has nothing to do with these problems. 

 It is of its very nature to pass no judgment on the 

 value of other methods of investigation. 



It presses on to its goal, the comprehension of the 

 world, regardless of all else. It gives an impulse 

 to the human mind that bears it on to ever greater 

 heights. The vision steadily enlarges. The individual 

 disappears ; the world lies at the feet of the spectator 

 in its broadest outlines. 



But we press onward. It bears us beyond the world 

 to a height whence we can survey the entire universe. 

 He who would see over the whole world must pass 

 beyond it. 



There, in pure ether, the mind is able at last to 

 grasp the infinite all. 



