Linus Pauling — "The scientific method is a never-ending process of observation, hypothesis, expe…"
The scientific method is a never-ending process of observation, hypothesis, experiment, and revision.
The scientific method is a never-ending process of observation, hypothesis, experiment, and revision.
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"A good scientist thinks logically and accurately when conditions call for logical and accurate thinking—but so does any other good worker when he has a sufficient number of well-founded facts to serve…"
"Every time you go to the doctor, the doctor asks you to take off your clothes, and then he looks at you, and he tells you what's wrong with you. But he doesn't know anything about you."
"I have always been a curious individual, and I believe that curiosity is the engine of progress."
"Everyone should know that the 'war on cancer' is largely a fraud."
"My own estimate is that all of the people in the United States would be killed in a nuclear war, if we do not build fallout shelters, and that if we do build them and train the American people, all of…"
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Science doesn't deliver final answers—it works through a continuous loop. You watch the world carefully, form a testable explanation, run experiments to check it, then update your thinking based on what you find. That cycle repeats indefinitely. No conclusion is permanent; every result opens new questions. The method's strength lies not in certainty but in its willingness to keep questioning and correcting itself.
Pauling spent decades revising his models of chemical bonding, most famously developing valence bond theory and applying quantum mechanics to molecular structure—work that earned him the 1954 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. His anti-nuclear activism after Hiroshima reflected the same empirical rigor applied to geopolitics. Even his later, controversial Vitamin C research showed a lifelong commitment to hypothesis-driven inquiry, however contested the conclusions became.
Pauling's most productive decades, the 1940s–1970s, coincided with the atomic age, when science reshaped civilization but also threatened it. Philosophers like Karl Popper were formalizing falsifiability as science's defining principle. The Cold War turned laboratories into ideological battlegrounds, and scientists faced pressure to present findings as definitive. Pauling's insistence on perpetual revision pushed back against political pressure and public demand for scientific certainty during a deeply uncertain era.
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