8,157 Quotes About Science
- Author Marie Curie
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I am one of those who think, like Nobel, that humanity will draw more good than evil from new discoveries.
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- Author Max Planck
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New scientific ideas never spring from a communal body, however organized, but rather from the head of an individually inspired researcher who struggles with his problems in lonely thought and unites all his thought on one single point which is his whole world for the moment.
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- Author Santosh Kalwar
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In every man, there is a child. In every woman, there is a mother.
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- Author Eliezer Yudkowsky
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By far the greatest danger of Artificial Intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it.
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- Author Steven Pinker
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the mind is a neural computer
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- Author Neil Postman
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The scientific method," Thomas Henry Huxley once wrote, "is nothing but the normal working of the human mind." That is to say, when the mind is working; that is to say further, when it is engaged in corrrecting its mistakes.Taking this point of view, we may conclude that science is not physics, biology, or chemistry--is not even a "subject"--but a moral imperative drawn from a larger narrative whose purpose is to give perspective, balance, and humility to learning.
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- Author Arthur S. Eddington
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An ocean traveler has even more vividly the impression that the ocean is made of waves than that it is made of water.
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- Author John Maynard Keynes
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Newton was not the first of the age of reason. He was the last of the magicians, the last of the Babylonians and Sumerians, the last great mind that looked out on the visible and intellectual world with the same eyes as those who began to build our intellectual inheritance rather less than 10,000 years ago.
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- Author Galileo Galilei
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I have been in my bed for five weeks, oppressed with weakness and other infirmities from which my age, seventy four years, permits me not to hope release. Added to this (proh dolor! [O misery!]) the sight of my right eye — that eye whose labors (dare I say it) have had such glorious results — is for ever lost. That of the left, which was and is imperfect, is rendered null by continual weeping.
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