Stephen Hawking — "I have always been fascinated by the big questions."
I have always been fascinated by the big questions.
I have always been fascinated by the big questions.
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"The universe doesn't care about your feelings."
"We are all visitors to this planet. We are here for a short time, and we must make the most of it."
"The universe doesn't allow perfection."
"One day, I hope to have a conversation with an alien."
"The greatest danger for our future is apathy."
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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The quote expresses a lifelong pull toward the deepest, most fundamental questions about existence — where the universe came from, what time is, whether it had a beginning, whether we are alone. These questions resist easy answers and sit at the edge of human knowledge. It signals a temperament that finds comfort not in small, solvable problems but in confronting what is barely within reach of understanding.
Diagnosed with motor neuron disease at 21 and given two years to live, Hawking spent over 50 years pursuing cosmology's hardest problems — black hole thermodynamics, Hawking radiation, the no-boundary proposal for the universe's origin. Unable to run experiments, he worked purely in theoretical physics where big questions are the only currency. A Brief History of Time sold 10 million copies because he made those questions feel urgent and personal.
Hawking worked from the 1960s through 2018, a period when cosmology transformed from philosophy into empirical science. The cosmic microwave background discovery in 1965 confirmed the Big Bang. Space missions proved black holes were real, not theoretical. The information paradox, quantum gravity, and string theory emerged as open battlegrounds. Big questions that once belonged to religion or speculation became suddenly addressable with mathematics and observation.
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