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PREFACE
This book
aims to be a collection of facts and not of theories, and insofar as
it is, I do not fear successful contradiction. When explanations have
been offered it has been done with considerable trepidation, because
I have never been able to formulate a theory that would withstand the
test of the facts either in my possession at the time, or accumulated
later. The same is true of the theories of every other man, for a theory
is only a guess, and you cannot guess or imagine the truth. No one has
ever satisfactorily answered the question, "Why ?" as most
scientific men are well aware, and I did not feel that I could do better
than others who had tried and failed. One cannot even draw conclusions
safely from facts, because a conclusion is very much like a theory,
and may be disproved or modified by facts accumulated later. In the
science of ophthalmology, theories, often stated as facts, have served
to obscure the truth and throttle investigation for more than a hundred
years. The explanations of the phenomena of sight put forward by Young,
von Graefe, Helmholtz and Donders have caused us to ignore or explain
away a multitude of facts which otherwise would have led to the discovery
of the truth about errors of refraction and the consequent prevention
of an incalculable amount of human misery.
In
presenting my experimental work to the public, I desire to acknowledge
my indebtedness to Mrs. E. C. Lierman, whose co-operation during four
years of arduous labor and prolonged failure made it possible to carry
the work to a successful issue. I would be glad, further, to acknowledge
my debt to others who aided me with suggestions, or more direct assistance,
but am unable to do so, as they have requested me not to mention their
names in this connection.
As
there has been a considerable demand for the book from the laity, an
effort has been made to present the subject in such a way as to be intelligible
to persons unfamiliar with ophthalmology.
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