"Our ideas must be as broad as Nature if they are to interpret Nature"
About this Quote
Doyle is pushing back against the comforting fiction that the world will fit inside our preferred categories. The line has the clean snap of a Victorian empiricist, but it’s also a warning shot: Nature doesn’t owe us legibility. If your “idea” is narrow - moralistic, doctrinaire, politely rational - you will misread what you’re looking at, not because you lack data, but because you lack range.
The specific intent is methodological. Doyle isn’t praising vagueness; he’s insisting on intellectual scale. To interpret Nature, your concepts have to stretch to accommodate the weirdness of facts: the exceptions, the coincidences, the parts that don’t play nice with existing theory. Coming from the creator of Sherlock Holmes, it’s a subtle correction to the pop-culture version of deduction as mere cleverness. Holmes’s real advantage is not just logic but the willingness to entertain an unglamorous possibility - to let the evidence widen the mind, rather than letting the mind shrink the evidence.
The subtext carries a late-19th-century anxiety: Darwin had expanded “Nature” into something vast, indifferent, and historically deep, while industrial modernity was flooding society with new phenomena that didn’t match inherited explanations. Doyle’s phrasing flatters ambition (“broad as Nature”) while quietly indicting intellectual provincialism. It’s also a critique of premature certainty: the temptation to interpret the world with a tidy, human-sized story. The sentence works because it turns humility into a demand, not a virtue. You don’t get to be smaller than what you’re studying.
The specific intent is methodological. Doyle isn’t praising vagueness; he’s insisting on intellectual scale. To interpret Nature, your concepts have to stretch to accommodate the weirdness of facts: the exceptions, the coincidences, the parts that don’t play nice with existing theory. Coming from the creator of Sherlock Holmes, it’s a subtle correction to the pop-culture version of deduction as mere cleverness. Holmes’s real advantage is not just logic but the willingness to entertain an unglamorous possibility - to let the evidence widen the mind, rather than letting the mind shrink the evidence.
The subtext carries a late-19th-century anxiety: Darwin had expanded “Nature” into something vast, indifferent, and historically deep, while industrial modernity was flooding society with new phenomena that didn’t match inherited explanations. Doyle’s phrasing flatters ambition (“broad as Nature”) while quietly indicting intellectual provincialism. It’s also a critique of premature certainty: the temptation to interpret the world with a tidy, human-sized story. The sentence works because it turns humility into a demand, not a virtue. You don’t get to be smaller than what you’re studying.
Quote Details
| Topic | Nature |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Arthur
Add to List





