Linus Pauling — "I have always been a scientist, and I believe that science is the best way to un…"
I have always been a scientist, and I believe that science is the best way to understand the world.
I have always been a scientist, and I believe that science is the best way to understand the world.
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"Science is the search for truth, but it is not the search for certainty. When science is used to search for certainty, it becomes something other than science."
"The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible."
"I have never had a bad idea."
"I am not afraid of death. I am afraid of not living."
"The most important thing in life is to be happy, and to make others happy."
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The speaker declares a personal identity rooted in scientific thinking and asserts that empirical inquiry — observation, experimentation, evidence — is the most reliable method for understanding reality. It is a commitment to rationalism over dogma, intuition, or ideology. Knowledge must be earned through rigorous testing rather than assumed. Science is not merely a career but a fundamental worldview, a way of engaging every question the world presents.
Pauling won two Nobel Prizes — Chemistry in 1954 for revolutionizing understanding of chemical bonds and molecular structure, Peace in 1962 for opposing nuclear weapons testing. Even his controversial vitamin C megadose advocacy was framed through scientific claims. Whether analyzing protein folding or arguing against Cold War arms buildup, he consistently applied empirical reasoning. Science was never just his profession; it was the single lens through which he evaluated every problem he encountered.
Pauling's peak years spanned the Cold War, when science simultaneously produced nuclear weapons and life-saving vaccines — celebrated and feared in equal measure. Scientists faced enormous pressure to subordinate inquiry to military and government priorities. The late 20th century also brought rising science skepticism, alternative medicine movements, and ideological challenges to empirical research. Asserting science as the best path to understanding was both a personal credo and an explicit defense of the scientific enterprise against those pressures.
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