HARLAN T. STETSON 237 



leaders for denouncing the present-day tendencies of 

 science. I have ventured upon this indulgence on the 

 grounds of many questions which a scientist is asked 

 that are distinctly in the category of religion, yet for 

 which apparently the inquirer finds no satisfactory 

 answers in the religious practices of the day. Only by 

 the interchange of view-points and the intelligent com- 

 parison of its methods and problems can science and 

 religion hope to join hands in evolving some philo- 

 sophical concept big enough to embrace both God and 

 his universe, and simple enough in its approach to 

 truth to make a religion workable and satisfying in 

 its expression to the modern man in an age of science. 



