James Clerk Maxwell — "It is a good thing to have a great many ideas, and a great many of them bad."
It is a good thing to have a great many ideas, and a great many of them bad.
It is a good thing to have a great many ideas, and a great many of them bad.
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"The true logic of this world is in the calculus of probabilities."
"The properties of the ether, if it exists, are certainly very remarkable."
"The only difference between a madman and me is that I am not mad."
"The peculiar function of the scientific man is to make discoveries, not to talk about them."
"At quite uncertain times and places, The atoms left their heavenly path, And by fortuitous embraces, Engendered all that being hath. And though they seem to cling together, And form 'associations' her…"
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Creativity works by volume, not by precision. You cannot generate only good ideas on demand, so the practical path is to produce many ideas knowing most will be wrong, weak, or unworkable. The bad ones are not waste; they are the raw material you sort through to find the rare good one. Judgment comes after generation, not before.
Maxwell built his breakthroughs, including unifying electricity, magnetism, and light into electromagnetic theory, by iterating through mechanical analogies, spinning-vortex models, and statistical arguments he later discarded. He treated Faraday's unconventional field pictures seriously when others dismissed them, and published Saturn's rings work and kinetic gas theory by testing many imperfect models. His willingness to entertain flawed ideas fueled his output.
Maxwell worked during the Victorian scientific revolution, when natural philosophy was splintering into specialized physics. Cambridge's Mathematical Tripos rewarded rigor, but the era's live problems, ether, thermodynamics, molecular motion, demanded speculative model-building. Darwin had just published, Kelvin and Helmholtz were debating energy, and experimental results arrived faster than theories could absorb them. Guessing productively, then pruning, was how nineteenth-century science actually advanced.
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