Dmitri Mendeleev — "Refrain from illusions, insist on work, and not on words, patiently search divin…"
Refrain from illusions, insist on work, and not on words, patiently search divine and scientific truth.
Refrain from illusions, insist on work, and not on words, patiently search divine and scientific truth.
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"I saw in a dream a table where all the elements fell into place as required. Awakening, I immediately wrote it down on a piece of paper, only in one place did a correction later seem necessary."
"I was very much interested in spiritualism, but I found no scientific basis for it."
"I have been called a charlatan, a madman, and a dreamer, but I have always pursued the truth."
"The future of the Russian nation lies in the hands of the schoolmaster and the priest."
"The properties of the elements are a periodic function of their atomic weights."
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Stop chasing fantasies and empty promises. Don't trust talk alone, trust demonstrated effort. Keep working steadily, even when results are slow, and remain humble enough to accept truth whether it comes from faith or from evidence. Real understanding requires patience, honest labor, and a willingness to follow what is actually true rather than what is convenient, fashionable, or self-flattering to believe.
Mendeleev spent years organizing known elements into his 1869 periodic table through relentless empirical work, famously leaving gaps for elements not yet discovered. A devout Russian Orthodox believer as well as a rigorous chemist, he saw no conflict between divine and scientific truth. He resisted speculative trends, demanded experimental evidence, and mentored students with this same discipline of patient, honest inquiry over rhetoric.
Mendeleev worked in 19th-century Russia during rapid industrialization, scientific upheaval, and clashes between mystical Slavophile traditions and Western rationalism. Spiritualism, seances, and pseudo-science were fashionable even among educated Europeans. Meanwhile chemistry was exploding with new elements and competing atomic theories. His plea for work over words and for unified divine-and-scientific truth pushed back against both superstitious fads and shallow academic posturing of his age.
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