Michael Faraday — "All this is but a dream, but I hope to make it a reality."
All this is but a dream, but I hope to make it a reality.
All this is but a dream, but I hope to make it a reality.
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"I am working on the conversion of magnetism into electricity, and I have every hope of success."
"There's nothing quite as frightening as someone who knows they are right."
"I am a very happy man, and have a good wife, and am very well content."
"The most important instrument a scientist has is his own mind."
"I have always found that the more I work, the more I enjoy it."
Attributed, possibly in reference to his early ideas about electromagnetism.
Date: Early 19th Century (approx.)
InspirationalFound in 1 providers: grok
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The speaker admits that a current vision or goal exists only in imagination right now, but commits to turning it into something concrete through effort and work. It captures the gap between an ambitious idea and its tangible achievement, while expressing determined optimism that imagination can be translated into actual, working reality through sustained labor and persistence.
Faraday spent decades turning speculative notions about invisible forces into working demonstrations. Self-taught from a bookbinder's apprenticeship, he translated Ørsted's hints into the first electric motor (1821) and discovered electromagnetic induction (1831). His laboratory notebooks repeatedly show him chasing intuitions others dismissed as fanciful, then building apparatus until the effect appeared. Dream-to-reality was literally his method.
Faraday worked at the Royal Institution during the early Victorian industrial surge (1820s-1860s), when steam, telegraphy, and gaslight were reshaping Britain. Electricity was still a parlor curiosity with no practical use when he began. His era prized patient experimentalism and public lectures, and his induction work quietly laid the groundwork for the dynamos, generators, and electrified civilization that arrived decades after his death in 1867.
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