"The present century has witnessed the emergence of two grand theories of mathematical physics: the Theory of Relativity and the Quantum Theory. Both theories were conceived for coordinating certain bodies of facts which the classical theories were unable to interpret; and neither theory would have seen the day had it not been for the increased refinement of experimental measurements which rendered the disclosure of these facts possible. But although the two theories were born under similar circumstances, they soon branched in opposite directions. The theory of relativity has developed into a doctrine whose principle field of application is found in the world of large-scale phenomena, whereas the quantum theory has become identified with the atomic and subatomic worlds. To this extent the theories are complimentary."
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A. D'Abro, The Decline of Mechanism (in Modern Physics) (1939) Preface
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_science
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History of science
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