The knowledge which a man can use is the only real knowledge, the only knowledge which has life and growth in it, and converts itself into practical power. The rest hangs like dust about the brain, or dries like raindrops off the stones. The Medical World - Page 1151892Full view - About this book
| Medicine - 1892 - 420 pages
...leave here with comparatively little real practical knowledge. Froude says : " The knowledge which a man can use is the only real knowledge, the only knowledge which has life and growth in it, and converts itself into practical power; the rest hangs like dust... | |
| Medicine - 1911 - 618 pages
...is this: "The knowledge which a man can use is the only real knowledge, the only ki ow'e.lge which has life and growth in it and converts itself into practical power" from Froude. To supply this "real knowledge" has been this author's endeavor, and right well has he... | |
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