Linus Pauling — "The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and…"
The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance.
The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance.
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"I am convinced that there is no disease that cannot be cured by a proper intake of vitamin C."
"The best way to have a good idea is to have a lot of ideas."
"I have always been interested in the human body and how it works."
"Never put your trust into anything but your own intellect. Your elder, no matter whether he has gray hair or has lost his hair, no matter whether he is a Nobel laureate — may be wrong. The world progr…"
"I have always been a curious person, and I believe that curiosity is the key to discovery."
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Change is disorienting when you observe it from a distance or try to resist it. The only path to genuine understanding is full immersion — adapt in real time, move alongside it, find your rhythm within the flux. Like dancing, intellectual comprehension alone fails; you must participate bodily and experientially. Clarity doesn't precede engagement; it only emerges from within it.
Pauling embodied this philosophy across two Nobel Prizes in different fields — Chemistry (1954) for revolutionizing molecular bond theory and Peace (1962) for nuclear test ban activism. He applied quantum mechanics to chemistry before consensus existed, then pivoted to peace work and vitamin C research when most scientists stayed cautious. Under McCarthyite pressure, he spoke louder. Each major shift in his life was a dance he joined willingly.
Pauling lived through the nuclear age's most destabilizing decades — Hiroshima, Cold War arms buildup, and atmospheric nuclear testing that poisoned soil globally. Science itself became morally contested terrain. Scientists faced McCarthyism for political speech; paradigms in physics and chemistry overturned within single careers. Pauling's era demanded exactly what the quote prescribes: not cautious observation of history's upheavals, but full, consequential participation in them.
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