Linus Pauling — "On many questions I have a better understanding of the issues than any politicia…"
On many questions I have a better understanding of the issues than any politicians.
On many questions I have a better understanding of the issues than any politicians.
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"Do not let your special talents in chemistry, your love for chemistry, keep you from developing your talents in other fields. Do not let yourself be a narrow specialist."
"I have always been interested in the nature of things, and especially in the nature of life."
"I have always been a curious person, and I believe that curiosity is the key to discovery."
"I believe that the future of humanity depends on our ability to cooperate and to solve the problems that confront us."
"I am not afraid of death. I am afraid of not living."
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A person with deep technical knowledge often grasps the real stakes of a complex issue—nuclear risk, public health, environmental harm—better than elected officials whose expertise is in winning votes, not analyzing evidence. The claim is that rigorous scientific thinking produces clearer understanding of fact-based problems than political instinct does, and that expertise earns the right to challenge official positions regardless of whether one holds office.
Pauling won two Nobel Prizes—Chemistry in 1954 and Peace in 1962—giving him rare dual authority over both the science and ethics of nuclear weapons. He circulated the 1958 Pauling Petition, signed by over 11,000 scientists, demanding a nuclear test ban, and testified before the Senate. The U.S. government revoked his passport and had him investigated by HUAC. His confidence in his own understanding was not vanity—it was a direct product of decades of validated scientific work.
Pauling spoke during the Cold War's most dangerous years, when U.S. nuclear policy was driven by military strategists and politicians who systematically minimized the health risks of atmospheric bomb testing. The McCarthy era criminalized dissent, and scientists who challenged government narratives faced passport revocations and Senate subpoenas. Public understanding of radiation biology was almost entirely controlled by official sources. Pauling's assertion of expert authority directly contested that monopoly at a moment when the consequences of being wrong were existential.
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