Linus Pauling — "I have always been a lover of nature, and I believe that we should all strive to…"
I have always been a lover of nature, and I believe that we should all strive to protect our planet.
I have always been a lover of nature, and I believe that we should all strive to protect our planet.
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"I am not a quack. I am a scientist."
"I think that the most important thing is to be honest with yourself and with others."
"I don't think there's anything wrong with taking a lot of vitamin C."
"The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance."
"I think that the formation of [DNA's] structure by Watson and Crick may turn out to be the greatest developments in the field of molecular genetics in recent years."
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We share a deep responsibility to care for the natural world. Protecting the planet is not optional activism but a fundamental moral duty for every person. The speaker frames environmental stewardship as something universal, rooted in genuine affection for nature rather than abstract policy, urging collective action rather than leaving conservation to governments or specialists alone.
Pauling spent decades bridging pure science and human welfare. His work on chemical bonds and molecular biology gave him intimate knowledge of how matter and life interconnect. His Nobel Peace Prize activism showed he believed scientists bore special responsibility for consequences of knowledge. Environmentalism fit naturally alongside his anti-nuclear campaigns as protection of the conditions that sustain human and planetary life.
Pauling lived through the postwar environmental awakening, from DDT controversies illuminated by Rachel Carson's 1962 Silent Spring to the first Earth Day in 1970 and the founding of the EPA. Nuclear testing fallout he actively opposed also poisoned ecosystems. Cold War industrial expansion threatened air, water, and soil globally, making the call to protect nature both scientifically urgent and politically charged.
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