Thomas Edison — "Show me a thoroughly satisfied man and I will show you failure."
Show me a thoroughly satisfied man and I will show you failure.
Show me a thoroughly satisfied man and I will show you failure.
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"The three great essentials to achieve anything worthwhile are, first, hard work; second, stick-to-itiveness; third, common sense."
"I owe my success to the fact that I never had a clock in my workroom. Seventy-five of us worked twenty hours every day and slept only four hours — and thrived on it."
"My life has been a series of experiments."
"To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk."
"I am not a spiritualist, but I am a firm believer in the fact that we can communicate with the beyond. I believe that we can build a machine that will allow us to hear the voices of the dead."
A provocative and somewhat absurd statement about the necessity of discontent for progress.
Date: Late 19th - early 20th century (approximate)
GeneralFound in 1 providers: gemini
1 source checked
Complete satisfaction with yourself or your work signals that you've stopped growing. The person who feels they've arrived, who no longer craves more or sees room for improvement, has quietly given up. Real achievement comes from restless dissatisfaction, the hunger that keeps pushing you to try again, build better, and refuse to settle. Contentment looks like peace but often hides stagnation.
Edison embodied this relentlessly. He held 1,093 US patents, famously endured thousands of failed filament experiments before the light bulb, and kept inventing into his eighties. After the phonograph, he pushed into motion pictures, alkaline batteries, and cement. He slept little, worked obsessively at Menlo Park, and treated every success as a springboard to the next problem rather than a resting point worth savoring.
Edison's era (1870s-1931) was America's Second Industrial Revolution, when electricity, telegraphy, and mass production were reshaping daily life. The self-made inventor-industrialist was a cultural hero, and Gilded Age ambition rewarded those who outworked competitors. Rivalries with Tesla, Westinghouse, and European labs made complacency dangerous. His quote captured a Protestant-work-ethic ideal fused with industrial competition, where standing still meant being eclipsed by the next patent or factory.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
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