Linus Pauling — "The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into th…"
The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible.
The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"The best way to learn is to teach."
"I am convinced that there is no disease that cannot be cured by a proper intake of vitamin C."
"Orthomolecular medicine is the preservation of good health and the treatment of disease by varying the concentrations of substances normally present in the body."
"I think that the future of medicine is in prevention, not in treatment."
"The pursuit of knowledge is an endless journey."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Pushing beyond perceived limits is the only reliable method for mapping reality's true boundaries. What seems impossible is often just untested — attempts that stay safely within assumed constraints never reveal where those constraints actually end. Progress, whether scientific or social, requires willingness to attempt what conventional wisdom calls unreachable, treating failure itself as data that redraws the map of what's achievable.
Pauling spent decades attempting what peers called impossible. His application of quantum mechanics to chemical bonding in the 1930s rewrote chemistry's foundations when the field barely accepted quantum theory. He won two Nobel Prizes — Chemistry and Peace — uniquely bridging hard science and political activism at a time when scientists rarely crossed into public dissent. His vitamin C megadose crusade, however misguided, showed the same boundary-pushing impulse applied even in his final decades.
Pauling's peak years spanned the Manhattan Project, Cold War, and nuclear arms race — a period when science itself had crossed into genuinely terrifying new territory. The atom bomb proved that impossible destruction was now possible, while Sputnik and polio vaccines showed science could equally liberate. Pauling's peace activism emerged precisely as governments were testing nuclear weapons in the atmosphere, making the question of where science's limits should be set urgently political, not merely philosophical.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty