Linus Pauling — "I believe that there is no such thing as an 'unimportant' discovery."
I believe that there is no such thing as an 'unimportant' discovery.
I believe that there is no such thing as an 'unimportant' discovery.
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"Well, I thought, that's nice of the old guy to say that, but I'm a little skeptical myself. And as the years went by, I thought, I don't do the sort of work for which Nobel Prizes are given."
"I have always been an optimist, and I believe that the future is bright."
"Science is the search for truth, but it is not the search for certainty. When science is used to search for certainty, it becomes something other than science."
"I believe that science and ethics are inextricably linked, and that we have a responsibility to use our knowledge wisely."
"I think that the vitamin C story is a very important story, and it's a story that has not yet been told in its entirety."
From a lecture or interview, expressing his view on scientific inquiry.
Date: Unknown
EducationalFound in 1 providers: grok
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Every discovery, no matter how minor it appears, carries genuine value. Knowledge compounds—what looks like a footnote today can become the foundation of a major breakthrough tomorrow. Dismissing any finding as trivial is intellectually shortsighted because science advances through accumulation. A small observation in one system might unlock understanding of another entirely. Nothing found is wasted; everything learned contributes to a larger picture of how the world works.
Pauling's career embodied this belief directly. His Nobel Prize in Chemistry emerged from chemical bond theory, but he also pioneered molecular medicine by identifying sickle cell disease as a molecular defect—a then-minor reframing with enormous consequences. He pursued high-dose vitamin C research despite ridicule. His willingness to follow findings others dismissed as fringe helped establish entire disciplines. He never accepted narrow specialization as a reason to ignore a result.
Pauling worked during rapid scientific specialization and Cold War funding pressure, when researchers were steered toward strategically important fields. The race to decode DNA showed how a seemingly minor X-ray diffraction image could be history-changing. The atomic bomb had made scientists acutely aware that discoveries carry enormous consequences. Against this backdrop, his insistence that no discovery is unimportant pushed back against reducing science to immediate political, military, or commercial utility.
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