Hermann von Helmholtz Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Hermann von Helmholtz's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Physician Hermann von Helmholtz's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 29 quotes on this page collected since August 31, 1821! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Hermann von Helmholtz: more...
  • All that science can achieve is a perfect knowledge and a perfect understanding of the action of natural and moral forces.

    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.93, University of Chicago Press
  • Whoever, in the pursuit of science, seeks after immediate practical utility, may generally rest assured that he will seek in vain.

    Science   May   Vain  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.93, University of Chicago Press
  • Reason we call that faculty innate in us of discovering laws and applying them with thought.

    Law   Reason   Faculty  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.97, University of Chicago Press
  • Black is real sensation, even if it is produced by entire absence of light. The sensation of black is distinctly different from the lack of all sensations.

    Real   Light   Black  
  • In speaking of the work of machines and of natural forces we must, of course, in this comparison eliminate anything in which activity of intelligence comes into play. The latter is also capable of the hard and intense work of thinking, which tries a man just as muscular exertion does.

    Men   Thinking   Play  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.98, University of Chicago Press
  • During the first half of the present century we had an Alexander von Humboldt, who was able to scan the scientific knowledge of his time in its details, and to bring it within one vast generalization. At the present juncture, it is obviously very doubtful whether this task could be accomplished in a similar way, even by a mind with gifts so peculiarly suited for the purpose as Humboldt's was, and if all his time and work were devoted to the purpose.

  • As you are aware, no perceptions obtained by the senses are merely sensations impressed on our nervous systems. A peculiar intellectual activity is required to pass from a nervous sensation to the conception of an external object, which the sensation has aroused. The sensations of our nerves of sense are mere symbols indicating certain external objects, and it is usually only after considerable practice that we acquire the power of drawing correct conclusions from our sensations respecting the corresponding objects.

  • The quantity of force which can be brought into action in the whole of Nature is unchangeable, and can neither be increased nor diminished.

    Action   Force   Quantity  
    Hermann von Helmholtz (1873). “Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects”, p.320
  • I think the facts leave no doubt that the very mightiest among the chemical forces are of electric origin. The atoms cling to their electric charges, and opposite electric charges cling to each other.

  • The smallest quantity of alcohol scares away novel ideas.

    Ideas   Alcohol   Scare  
  • A moving body whose motion was not retarded by any resisting force would continue to move to all eternity.

    Moving   Body   Retarded  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.116, University of Chicago Press
  • Music strikes the ear as a perfectly undisturbed uniform sound which remains unaltered as long as it exists.

    Long   Sound   Ears  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, Alexander John Ellis (1875). “On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music”, p.12, London : Longmans, Green and Company
  • The formation of scales and of the web of harmony is a product of artistic invention, and is in no way given by the natural structure or by the natural behaviour of our hearing, as used to be generally maintained hitherto.

    Behaviour   Way   Hearing  
    "The Theory of Sound". Book by John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, 1862.
  • A raised weight can produce work, but in doing so it must necessarily sink from its height, and, when it has fallen as deep as it can fall, its gravity remains as before, but it can no longer do work.

    Fall   Weight   Height  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.124, University of Chicago Press
  • I then endeavoured to show that it is more especially in the thorough conformity with law which natural phenomena and natural products exhibit, and in the comparative ease with which laws can be stated, that this difference exists.

    Law   Differences   Ease  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.96, University of Chicago Press
  • Isolated facts and experiments have in themselves no value, however great their number may be. They only become valuable in a theoretical or practical point of view when they make us acquainted with the law of a series of uniformly recurring phenomena, or, it may be, only give a negative result showing an incompleteness in our knowledge of such a law, till then held to be perfect.

    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.208, University of Chicago Press
  • Heat can also be produced by the impact of imperfectly elastic bodies as well as by friction. This is the case, for instance, when we produce fire by striking flint against steel, or when an iron bar is worked for some time by powerful blows of the hammer.

    Powerful   Blow   Fire  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.116, University of Chicago Press
  • Each individual fact, taken by itself, can indeed arouse our curiosity or our astonishment, or be useful to us in its practical applications.

    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.97, University of Chicago Press
  • When young Galileo, then a student at Pisa, noticed one day during divine service a chandelier swinging backwards and forwards, and convinced himself, by counting his pulse, that the duration of the oscillations was independent of the arc through which it moved, who could know that this discovery would eventually put it in our power, by means of the pendulum, to attain an accuracy in the measurement of time till then deemed impossible, and would enable the storm-tossed seaman in the most distant oceans to determine in what degree of longitude he was sailing?

    Time   Ocean   Mean  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.93, University of Chicago Press
  • Windmills, which are used in the great plains of Holland and North Germany to supply the want of falling water, afford another instance of the action of velocity. The sails are driven by air in motion - by wind.

    Fall   Air   Wind  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.106, University of Chicago Press
  • Not that I wish by any means to deny, that the mental life of individuals and peoples is also in conformity with law, as is the object of philosophical, philological, historical, moral, and social sciences to establish.

    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.96, University of Chicago Press
  • A metaphysical conclusion is either a false conclusion or a concealed experimental conclusion.

    Hermann von Helmholtz, David Cahan (1995). “Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays”, p.326, University of Chicago Press
  • Just as a physicist has to examine the telescope and galvanometer with which he is working; has to get a clear conception of what he can attain with them, and how they may deceive him; so, too, it seemed to me necessary to investigate likewise the capabilities of our power of thought.

  • Music stands in a much closer connection with pure sensation than any of the other arts.

    Music   Art   Connections  
    Hermann von Helmholtz, Alexander John Ellis (1875). “On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music”, p.3, London : Longmans, Green and Company
  • What we see is the solution to a computational problem, our brains compute the most likely causes from the photon absorptions within our eyes.

    Eye   Brain   Causes  
  • The most startling result of Faraday's Law is perhaps this. If we accept the hypothesis that the elementary substances are composed of atoms, we cannot avoid concluding that electricity also, positive as well as negative, is divided into definite elementary portions, which behave like atoms of electricity.

    Science   Law   Negative  
    Hermann von Helmholtz (1971). “Selected writings of Hermann von Helmholtz”, Wesleyan Univ Pr
  • There is a kind, I might almost say, of artistic satisfaction, when we are able to survey the enormous wealth of Nature as a regularly ordered whole a kosmos, an image of the logical thought of our own mind.

    Mind   Might   Able  
    Hermann von Helmholtz (1873). “Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects”, p.319
  • The originator of a new concept...finds, as a rule, that it is much more difficult to find out why other people do not understand him, than it was to discover the new truth.

  • The total quantity of all the forces capable of work in the whole universe remains eternal and unchanged throughout all their changes. All change in nature amounts to this, that force can change its form and locality, without its quantity being changed. The universe possesses, once for all, a store of force which is not altered by any change of phenomena, can neither be increased nor diminished, and which maintains any change which takes place on it.

    Science   Form   Stores  
    Hermann von Helmholtz (1873). “Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects”, p.360
Page 1 of 1
We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 29 quotes from the Physician Hermann von Helmholtz, starting from August 31, 1821! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
Hermann von Helmholtz quotes about: