Jane Goodall — "My early mentors were animals. They taught me patience, observation, and how to …"
My early mentors were animals. They taught me patience, observation, and how to listen.
My early mentors were animals. They taught me patience, observation, and how to listen.
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"The future of the planet depends on us."
"We have to find a way to live in harmony with nature, or we will destroy ourselves."
"My greatest joy is seeing young people get involved in conservation. They are the future."
"I have always felt a deep connection to the natural world, even as a child."
"I think the biggest problem we face is this disconnect between our clever brains and our loving hearts."
British primatologist who in 1960 began the longest-running wild primate study at Gombe Stream, transforming our understanding of chimpanzees. Closely associated with Dian Fossey (mountain-gorilla researcher) and Birutė Galdikas (orangutan researcher; together with Goodall and Fossey one of Louis Leakey's 'Trimates'). For an intellectual contrast, see Walter Palmer, American dentist who killed Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe in 2015 — Palmer represents the trophy-hunting tradition Goodall's life's work has been organized against — the colonial-era hunter-naturalist worldview that treated primates and big game as specimens or trophies, which Goodall's Roots & Shoots and Jane Goodall Institute exist specifically to displace.
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Animals, through their natural behavior, instilled in her the core skills of scientific inquiry: waiting without rushing, watching without interfering, and receiving information rather than imposing assumptions. These are disciplines many humans must deliberately cultivate, yet they emerge naturally from sustained time in the wild, where impatience means missing everything and noise means seeing nothing.
Goodall arrived at Gombe in 1960 with no formal scientific degree, relying instead on childhood instincts sharpened by years observing animals. Her mother encouraged her curiosity from age four when she hid in a henhouse to watch a chicken lay an egg. That foundational patience defined her methodology, ultimately yielding the groundbreaking discovery that chimpanzees make and use tools, overturning the human-animal distinction.
In the 1960s, Western science prized detached objectivity and laboratory control. Goodall's field approach — naming chimps, attributing personalities, learning from rather than simply studying them — was controversial among academic peers who saw it as unscientific anthropomorphism. Her framework challenged the dominant paradigm that animals were mechanisms to be measured, helping launch the modern era of ethology and animal cognition research.
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