Linus Pauling — "The most important thing in science is to ask the right questions."
The most important thing in science is to ask the right questions.
The most important thing in science is to ask the right questions.
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"I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."
"I have spent a good deal of my life trying to get people to eat more vitamin C."
"Well David, I have a lot of ideas and throw away the bad ones."
"I think that the future of medicine is in prevention, not in treatment."
"The most important thing is to never stop questioning."
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Progress in science depends less on having answers and more on identifying what to ask. A poorly framed question leads research down dead ends regardless of effort or talent. Choosing the right problem to pursue—one that is both solvable and consequential—is itself the highest intellectual act, separating transformative discoveries from incremental busywork.
Pauling won two unshared Nobel Prizes—Chemistry in 1954 for chemical bonding theory and Peace in 1962 for opposing nuclear testing—demonstrating that asking genuinely right questions spans disciplines. His work on protein structure directly influenced DNA research, and his anti-nuclear activism reframed a political question as a scientific and moral one.
Pauling lived through an era of explosive scientific growth—quantum mechanics, nuclear weapons, molecular biology—where the questions scientists chose carried civilization-level consequences. The Cold War made scientific priorities political: government funding shaped which questions got asked, and Pauling's career showed that asking inconvenient questions, like whether nuclear fallout harms civilians, required both courage and precision.
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