Marie Curie — "After all, science is essentially an international thing."
After all, science is essentially an international thing.
After all, science is essentially an international thing.
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"Be less curious about people and more curious about ideas."
"Life is not easy for any of us. But what of that? We must have perseverance and above all confidence in ourselves."
"All my life through, the new sights of Nature made me rejoice like a child."
"Life is not easy for any of us. But what of that? We must have perseverance and above all confidence in ourselves. We must believe that we are gifted for something and that this thing must be attained…"
"One never notices what has been done; one can only see what remains to be done."
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Scientific knowledge does not belong to any single country. Discoveries, methods, and data cross borders freely because nature works the same everywhere. Researchers build on each other's findings regardless of nationality, and progress depends on sharing results openly across languages and political lines. Treating science as a national possession slows everyone down, while cooperation accelerates understanding for all humanity.
Curie lived this belief. Born Polish, she studied and worked in France, collaborated with British, German, and American scientists, and refused to patent radium so researchers worldwide could use it freely. She toured the United States to raise funds for her Paris lab and founded the Radium Institute in Warsaw, deliberately linking her adopted and native countries through research rather than guarding discoveries for national glory.
Curie worked while European nationalism hardened into the rivalries that produced World War I, which she served by driving mobile X-ray units to the front. Afterward, governments increasingly tied science to military and economic power, and laboratories competed for prestige. Her insistence on international scientific community pushed against that tide, aligning with early League of Nations efforts at intellectual cooperation, where she served on the Committee on Intellectual Cooperation.
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