Alexander Graham Bell — "Every man has a right to his own opinion, but no man has a right to be wrong in …"
Every man has a right to his own opinion, but no man has a right to be wrong in his facts.
Every man has a right to his own opinion, but no man has a right to be wrong in his facts.
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"The most successful men in the end are those whose success is the result of steady accretion."
"What this power is I cannot say; all I know is that it exists and it becomes available only when a man is in that state of mind in which he knows exactly what he wants and is fully determined not to g…"
"Man is a tool-using animal. Without tools he is nothing, with tools he is all."
"The telephone will be so important that every town will have one."
"The day will come when the telephone will be used by every household in America."
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You're free to hold any personal belief or preference — those are yours to keep. But when you assert something as factual, you carry a responsibility to be accurate. Opinions are subjective and can't be proven wrong; facts can be verified or refuted. The quote draws a hard line: personal views deserve protection, but factual claims demand accountability. Getting your facts wrong isn't a matter of perspective — it's simply an error.
Bell spent over a decade defending his telephone patent against Elisha Gray and dozens of other claimants — courtroom battles where precise facts determined ownership of his greatest invention. As a scientist trained in acoustics and speech, he built his career on empirical rigor. He co-founded Science magazine and led the National Geographic Society, institutions defined by verifiable fact. His mother and wife were deaf, sharpening his focus on precise, evidence-based methods of communication.
Bell's era (1847–1922) saw mass-circulation newspapers spread misinformation freely with little accountability. Darwin's theory of evolution ignited fierce fact-versus-belief battles across society. Patent law made factual precision legally consequential — Bell's telephone patent faced over 600 challenges in court. The scientific method was becoming the dominant framework for resolving disputes, yet a rapidly expanding public sphere made it dangerously easy to conflate personal opinion with established fact.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
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