Linus Pauling — "I think that we should make the world safe for differences."
I think that we should make the world safe for differences.
I think that we should make the world safe for differences.
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"I refuse to be intimidated by the word impossible."
"I am not a believer in the idea that you have to be sick to take vitamins."
"Science is the search for truth, and engineering is the search for ways to make things work."
"I realized that medical and biological investigators were not attacking their problems the same way that theoretical physicists do, the way I had been in the habit of doing."
"The scientific method is a never-ending process of observation, hypothesis, experiment, and revision."
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The world should be structured so that people, nations, and ideas that differ from dominant norms can exist without fear of persecution or elimination. Safety here means legal protection, cultural tolerance, and political structures that do not demand conformity as a condition of survival. Diversity of thought, identity, and approach is treated as a feature worth protecting, not a threat to be neutralized.
Pauling was a Nobel laureate in both Chemistry and Peace, rare dual recognition reflecting his dual commitment to scientific truth and human rights. He fought McCarthyism when the U.S. government revoked his passport for his peace activism. His willingness to hold minority scientific views, like early work on protein structure, and political views under pressure made tolerance for difference personally lived, not abstract.
Pauling was most active during the Cold War, when ideological conformity was enforced through McCarthyite loyalty oaths, nuclear brinksmanship demanded national unity, and colonized nations were being pressured into alignment with either superpower. His nuclear test ban advocacy and peace movement work positioned him directly against a world order that treated difference, political, national, ideological, as an existential danger to be suppressed.
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