Bacon, Francis The Wisdom of the Ancients
"Mediocrity, or the middle way, is in most cases a virtue, and highly commendable; but in philosophy and the sciences it is a thing of dangerous consequence. For the path of virtue lies straight forward between two extremes; but the way of truth and knowledge lies through a narrow path, between two vast and hazardous rocks, where a man cannot deviate without falling into one or the other of them. [...] Thus the mind of man, being impatient of a lingering and progressive inquiry, is apt to take a flight, and to rise up to generalities, as it were upon the wings of Icarus; and so, by a premature and unseasonable flight, falls headlong into errors and false conclusions." (407–408)
