lated discovery that science and religion are one, 
and being one, they must be Free. Free from control of 
ignorance and prejudice,— free from creeds and dogmas,— 
free from hypocrisy and cant, from cryptic methods and con¬ 
ventional barriers raised against the in-flow of intelligence and 
honesty. 
With Goethe I cry: 
“Free will I be—aye free in thought and line, 
Nor shall the world’s restraint my course confine 
“A theory that is afraid of investigation is undeserving of a 
place in the human mind.” 
When we think of the appalling loss of time and opportunity 
—with their toll of suffering and human life—sacrificed to the 
useless, but spectacular suppression of the symptoms and mani¬ 
festations of disease, which might, with vast advantage, have 
been aimed at the fundamental constitutional causes of the same 
—is there, I ask you, any room for wonderment if the popular 
patience is at last exhausted and the hour of retribution is at 
hand? 
This undertaking and my aims are affected only indirectly 
by these controversial matters as such.—The aims of my New 
School of Science are centered upon an infinitely grander, higher 
plant; its objective is, broadly, the Regeneration of the race, 
through the teachings of Biology, Eugenics and their laws, with 
the aid of physiological chemistry, up to now neglected and sup¬ 
pressed by orthodox organizations;—the eventual physical sal¬ 
vation of the race as a whole is the goal towards which we would 
win;—the physical salvation of the individual from constitu¬ 
tional defects is but a necessary detail of the cause, though never¬ 
theless a problem which has been brought to a careful and final 
demonstration by the light of deep and exhaustive scientific re¬ 
search and practice of nature’s fundamental laws. 
19 
