"physics, for the most part, is nothing else but the substitute of exercise or temperance." A Joseph Addison is apparently not an acceptable answer as it will not open the appropriate resultant page for scoring. The quote fits, is verified online, and has no (that I can find) alternative version. Sorry to seem such a snipe.
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I agree with opallady. That puzzle cost me a lot of time until I finally remembered the time period in which Addison lived. Then the word "physick" made more sense as the general term for what passed as a medicine or a remedy in that day. Addison and Newton were contemporaries, but it is not likely that the science that came to be known as physics was wide-spread common knowledge at that time; especially Addison's circle of poets, playwrights, and politicians.[B][I]"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds."[/I] [/B]-- Albert Einstein
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