Stephen Hawking — "The universe is a very strange place, and I'm still trying to figure it out."
The universe is a very strange place, and I'm still trying to figure it out.
The universe is a very strange place, and I'm still trying to figure it out.
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"We are all different, but we share the same human spirit. Perhaps it's human nature that we adapt and survive."
"One of the basic rules of the universe is that nothing is perfect. Perfection simply doesn't exist....Without imperfection, neither you nor I would exist."
"We are all driven by a desire to understand the universe."
"The universe is a great place to be, and I'm glad to be a part of it. But it's also a very dangerous place, and we need to be careful."
"The universe is a place of wonder and mystery, and I'm glad to be a part of it."
British theoretical physicist whose Hawking radiation work and A Brief History of Time (1988) brought black-hole physics to a mass audience while he lived with ALS for 55 years. Closely associated with Roger Penrose (his collaborator on singularity theorems) and Carl Sagan (fellow popularizer who wrote Brief History's foreword). For an intellectual contrast, see William Lane Craig, American philosopher of religion — Craig's Kalam cosmological argument depends on the Big Bang requiring a divine first cause; Hawking's no-boundary proposal was specifically designed to remove the moment that would require one — the cleanest cosmology-vs-natural-theology contrast in modern thought.
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Reality at its most fundamental level defies common sense — quantum particles behave unpredictably, spacetime bends, black holes evaporate. Even our best theories leave enormous gaps. The speaker admits that despite decades of work, genuine understanding remains incomplete. Intellectual humility here isn't weakness; it's the honest acknowledgment that the cosmos is far stranger than human intuition was built to handle.
Hawking spent fifty years probing the universe's most extreme environments — black hole singularities, the Big Bang's origin, quantum gravity — yet consistently described physics as unfinished business. Diagnosed with ALS at 21 and given two years to live, he worked for decades confined to a wheelchair, communicating through a speech synthesizer, driven by relentless curiosity rather than certainty. His career embodied productive bewilderment.
Hawking worked through physics' most destabilizing decades: the 1970s confirmation of black holes, 1980s superstring theory proliferation, and the 1998 dark energy discovery that overturned cosmological models. Each breakthrough revealed deeper mysteries rather than closure. The late 20th century saw physics move from confident grand unified theories to acknowledging that 95% of the universe — dark matter and dark energy — remained completely unexplained.
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