Abstract
IN the conflict of ideas, the clash of two diametrically opposed ways of living, which are involved in the present War, the British Association's recent Conference on Science and World Order may well prove to have as profound a significance as President Roosevelt's clear enunciation of the four freedoms which are at stake, and as the declaration which arose out of his Atlantic meeting with Mr. Churchill. In place of the thoughtless blaming of science for the misuse of the knowledge and power with which scientific discoveries and their application have endowed mankind, we have the recognition that from henceforth science and statecraft, in Mr. Eden's words (see p. 403), must march together.
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THE CHARTER OF SCIENTIFIC FELLOWSHIP. Nature 148, 379–380 (1941). https://doi.org/10.1038/148379a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/148379a0