Carl Sagan — "The greatest joy of science is discovery."
The greatest joy of science is discovery.
The greatest joy of science is discovery.
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"Who are we? We are a collection of water and a few fundamental chemicals, but we are also a way for the universe to know itself."
"...how is it that hardly any major religion has looked at science and concluded, 'This is better than we thought! The Universe is much bigger than our prophets said, grander, more subtle, more elegant…"
"If we are to survive, we must be willing to change."
"A book is made of paper, ink, and imagination. It is a portal to new worlds and new ideas."
"The cure for a fallacious argument is a better argument, not the suppression of ideas."
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The highest pleasure science offers is the moment of finding something genuinely new — an answer, a pattern, a truth no one has ever known. Not the grants, the prestige, or the publications, but that electric instant when the unknown becomes known. Every experiment is a question; discovery is when the universe finally answers back. That feeling is what makes scientists persist through years of failure.
Sagan built his career on discovery — identifying the greenhouse effect on Venus, studying Titan's atmosphere, and championing SETI. But he was equally devoted to spreading the joy of finding things out to ordinary people through Cosmos, Pale Blue Dot, and public lectures. He believed science's emotional core — the wonder of learning something real about the universe — was its best argument for public support and human survival.
Sagan's peak years, the 1970s through early 1990s, coincided with the Space Race's aftermath, Voyager's grand tours of the outer planets, and early SETI debates. Cold War competition drove massive science funding, but public enthusiasm was waning after Apollo. Sagan argued that the intrinsic joy of discovery — not just military or economic utility — justified science's place in society, making this sentiment both personal conviction and cultural defense.
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