James Clerk Maxwell — "The only way to avoid error is to have no ideas at all."
The only way to avoid error is to have no ideas at all.
The only way to avoid error is to have no ideas at all.
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Mistakes are the price of thinking. If you never propose anything, you can never be wrong, but you also never discover anything. Every genuine idea carries the risk of being incorrect, and that risk is unavoidable for anyone actually doing intellectual work. Playing it safe by refusing to commit to hypotheses guarantees a spotless record and an empty one. Progress belongs to people willing to be wrong in public.
Maxwell built physics by proposing bold, testable ideas, notably unifying electricity, magnetism, and light into a single electromagnetic theory. He revised his own equations repeatedly and introduced the statistical Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution despite uncertainty. A devout Christian and careful experimentalist, he valued humility alongside daring conjecture, accepting that each hypothesis might fail. His willingness to risk being wrong produced the framework Einstein later called the most profound shift in physics since Newton.
Maxwell worked in mid-nineteenth-century Britain during an explosion of scientific theorizing, when Darwin published On the Origin of Species, Kelvin debated thermodynamics, and Faraday's field concepts were still contested. The Royal Society prized cautious empiricism, yet radical speculation was reshaping geology, biology, and physics simultaneously. Victorian scientists faced public scrutiny and religious pressure over controversial claims. In that climate, defending the right to propose fallible ideas was a working principle, not an abstraction.
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