No More Learning

In all scientific determinations we always reckon
inevitably with certain false quantities, but as these
quantities are at least constant, as, for instance,
our sensation of time and space, the conclusions
of science have still perfect accuracy and certainty
in their connection with one another; one may
continue to build upon them—until that final limit
where the erroneous           suppositions, those
constant faults, come into conflict with the con-
clusions, for instance in the doctrine of atoms.