Alexander Graham Bell — "I have always considered myself as an Agnostic..."
I have always considered myself as an Agnostic...
I have always considered myself as an Agnostic...
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"The day will come when the man at the telephone will be able to see the distant person to whom he is speaking."
"The deaf must hear, the dumb must speak, the blind must see."
"The greatest achievement is to rise above yourself."
"The deaf are not a race apart. They are a part of humanity."
"I have always been a great believer in luck, and I find that the harder I work, the more I have of it."
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Bell is declaring a position of intellectual honesty about ultimate questions — neither claiming God exists nor denying it, but acknowledging that such knowledge lies beyond human certainty. Agnosticism holds that metaphysical truths about divinity are unknown or unknowable. Rather than adopting inherited religious belief or outright atheism, Bell chose honest uncertainty, grounded in the principle that one should only affirm what evidence and reason can actually support.
Bell spent his life pushing the limits of human knowledge — inventing the telephone, studying acoustics, experimenting with flight and genetics. His empirical, evidence-first mindset naturally extended to philosophy. Raised in a Scottish Presbyterian household, Bell nonetheless followed observation over doctrine. His lifelong work with the deaf, including his hearing-impaired mother, grounded him in the physical world. Agnosticism was his scientist's answer to questions observation alone could never settle.
Bell came of age in the intellectual upheaval following Darwin's 1859 On the Origin of Species. T.H. Huxley coined 'agnostic' in 1869, giving Victorian scientists a respectable position between faith and atheism. The late 19th century saw fierce tension between scientific materialism and organized religion. Prominent thinkers — Huxley, Spencer, Tyndall — normalized doubt as intellectually honest. For an inventor reshaping human communication, claiming agnosticism aligned naturally with an era demanding evidence over tradition.
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