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10

Herein is my hope of exciting effective curiosity to read this article, wherein shall be outlined (and sufficiently defended,) an account both of the general course and of the rationale of all successful scientific inquiry,—an account naturally not fully provable in a few pages (as I am fully prepared and propose, God disposing, eventually to prove it in a book,) the least dubitable points of which account suffice not only to show the Neglected Argument to be the most promising beginning of an inquiry, capable [of] receiving the complement required to convert it into an unusually strong scientific proof, but further from certain unregarded concomitants of the Neglected Argument,—crumbs from its table, so to say,—to enable us to build up a strong confirmation of the conclusion.

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