James Watson — "If you're not offending someone, you're not doing your job."
If you're not offending someone, you're not doing your job.
If you're not offending someone, you're not doing your job.
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"All our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours — whereas all the testing says not really."
"I think it's important to be honest about these things."
"If you don't like what I say, don't listen."
"I think it's perfectly legitimate to ask whether all human populations are equally intelligent."
"I'm a very impatient person."
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The quote argues that meaningful work—scientific, creative, or intellectual—requires challenging deeply held assumptions and upsetting those who benefit from comfortable consensus. True impact demands saying difficult, unwelcome truths rather than hedging for social approval. Staying inoffensive signals timidity or complicity with the status quo. Anyone doing serious work must accept that disturbing people who prefer their existing beliefs undisturbed is unavoidable.
Watson embodied this ethos—sometimes productively, often recklessly. Beyond co-discovering DNA's double helix with Crick in 1953, he spent decades making inflammatory remarks about race, gender, and intelligence, including claims about African populations' genetic intelligence. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory stripped him of honorary titles in 2019. He appeared to treat controversy as proof of intellectual courage, rarely distinguishing bold science from gratuitous provocation.
Watson's career spanned the Cold War scientific revolution through the genomics boom of the 1990s and 2000s. As genome sequencing made race and intelligence newly measurable questions, academic speech norms became fiercely contested. Culture-war debates over political correctness erupting in universities framed provocateurs who challenged taboos as either intellectual heroes or moral failures, making Watson a recurring flashpoint in those arguments.
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