Most people will admit, I think, that it is calculated to produce bewilderment rather than conviction, because there is more likelihood of error in a very subtle, abstract, and difficult argument than in so patent a fact as the interrelatedness of the things in the world.
"Our Knowledge of the External World as a Field for Scientific Method in Philosophy"
Bertrand Russell
Man is an embodied being, and the nurse, in nurturing the patient's well-being and more-being, must relate to him and his body in their mysterious interrelatedness.
"Humanistic-Nursing"
Paterson, Josephine G.