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The Adventure of Life.

JAMA. 1919;73(3):216. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610290058031.
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ABSTRACT

The author, a physician in the Medical Department of the British Army, endeavors to formulate a scientific interpretation of life. "Begun on a winter night in a little bell-tent in the north of France within sight of the firing line," it was written during the leisure moments of a busy medical officer's life in the midst of the closing year of the great war. Unable to accept the purely materialistic explanation of life, the author holds that the indomitable logic of facts drives one to the conclusion that behind all and above all there is an intelligent and beneficent Mind immanent in nature and in the life of man. The book is written in the hope that it may help to illumine the clouds of perplexity with which many an earnest seeker after the truth finds himself surrounded. The writer believes that the goal of nature is life, the aim

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