"My purpose is merely to illustrate the issue involved in our question about the unification of science. A complete unification... would be a unification downward, finding its ultimate and universal laws in mechanics; and it would include in its scope all the movements of human bodies. Those who assert the possibility of a rigorously complete unification thus imply a denial of all physical efficacy to thoughts and feelings as such. Those, on the contrary, who assert such efficacy deny by implication the possibility of a complete unification of even the laws of the motion of matter. They tacitly or explicitly introduce a real discontinuity into the fabric of science."
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Arthur O. Lovejoy, "The Unity of Science" (1912) Non-technical Lectures by Members of the Faculty of the University of Missouri: Series I: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, The University of Missouri Bulletin Science Series Vol.1
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Unification_in_science_and_mathematics
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Unification in science and mathematics
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