Abstract
AS we are accustomed in this country to look on the Times as a political barometer, the appearance in it of the very admirable article to which we drew attention last week must be regarded as proof that the exigency of the situation in which the nation is placed is likely soon to attract some share of the attention it imperatively demands. And the question arises how we may best secure that “scientific organisation in the field, in the workshop, in the laboratory, and in the conduct of national policy” which the Times so fully and justly recognises to be essential to our national safety.
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The Organisation of Science. Nature 53, 97–98 (1895). https://doi.org/10.1038/053097a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/053097a0