Linus Pauling — "I have always been interested in the nature of things, and especially in the nat…"
I have always been interested in the nature of things, and especially in the nature of life.
I have always been interested in the nature of things, and especially in the nature of life.
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"I confess that I had harbored the feeling that sooner or later I would be the one to get the DNA structure; and although I was pleased with the double-helix, I 'rather wished the idea had been his'."
"War is the greatest evil."
"I'm just a simple chemist."
"I am convinced that we can abolish war, and that we must do so if we are to survive."
"I have always been a non-conformist."
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A declaration of insatiable intellectual curiosity—specifically toward understanding how the physical world works and, most urgently, how living organisms function at their most fundamental level. It frames scientific inquiry not as career ambition but as a deep personal drive: the universe and its living creatures pose questions that simply demand answers, and this person cannot help but pursue them.
Pauling spent his career dissecting nature's architecture—mapping chemical bonds, uncovering the alpha-helix structure of proteins, and pioneering molecular biology. His Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Peace both stem from this drive: quantum mechanics explained bonding; that same curiosity about biological molecules led him to DNA research and later to vitamin C megadosing. Science for Pauling was never compartmentalized—it was a unified obsession.
Pauling worked across the mid-20th century, when physics and chemistry were being rewritten by quantum theory and biology was on the verge of the molecular revolution. The 1950s-60s saw the DNA double helix discovered, the genetic code cracked, and life itself becoming explicable through chemistry. Pauling stood at that frontier, a period when 'the nature of life' shifted from philosophy to hard science for the first time.
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