Francis Crick — "If you want to get ahead in science, you have to be a bit of a maverick."
If you want to get ahead in science, you have to be a bit of a maverick.
If you want to get ahead in science, you have to be a bit of a maverick.
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"The human brain is a wonderful thing. It starts working the moment you are born and never stops until you stand up to speak in public."
"The Christian believer is like a tenant who is about to sign a lease on a flat when someone tells him that the owner of the flat does not exist."
"If you are not a little bit mad, you will never discover anything new."
"The future of biology is in the brain."
"I was never a very good experimentalist."
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Real progress in science rarely comes from following the crowd or sticking to safe, accepted ideas. To make breakthroughs, a researcher must be willing to challenge conventional wisdom, ask uncomfortable questions, and pursue lines of inquiry that mainstream colleagues dismiss. Originality requires a tolerance for being wrong publicly and the nerve to back unpopular hunches. Conformity may earn tenure, but it rarely produces discovery worth remembering.
Crick embodied this maverick streak. He left physics for biology mid-career, an unusual jump, and at the Cavendish he and Watson built physical models of DNA while rivals like Franklin pursued strict crystallography. He later abandoned molecular biology entirely for consciousness research at the Salk Institute, championing fringe ideas like panspermia. His willingness to cross disciplines and back speculative theories defined a career that produced one of biology's most consequential discoveries.
Crick worked through the postwar transformation of biology, when physicists flooded into life sciences and the gene's molecular nature was the field's biggest open question. Cambridge in the early 1950s was a hierarchical, conservative scientific culture, yet the race to crack DNA rewarded boldness and informal model-building over methodical orthodoxy. The Cold War poured funding into basic research, creating space for unconventional thinkers, and the rise of molecular biology depended on outsiders willing to ignore traditional disciplinary boundaries.
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