Abstract
AFTER referring to the circumstances in which he was called upon to deliver the evening discourse in the absence of the Dean of Westminster, the lecturer explained that he had chosen the subject, not because he regarded weather forecasting as the only, or, from the scientific point of view, the most important practical branch of meteorology, but because, in a general sense, the possibility of its application to forecasting—the deduction of effects from given causes—was the touchstone of scientific knowledge.
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References
The Meteroological Aspects of the Storm of February 26–37, 1903. Q. J. R. Met. Soc., vol. xxix. p. 233; 1903.
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Some Aspects of Modern Weather Forecasting 1 . Nature 72, 354–355 (1905). https://doi.org/10.1038/072354b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/072354b0