Enrico Fermi — "Young man, I am not trying to shake your faith in God, but in the physicists."
Young man, I am not trying to shake your faith in God, but in the physicists.
Young man, I am not trying to shake your faith in God, but in the physicists.
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"Before I came here I was not only a little confused about the subject, but also had some doubts about my confusion."
"The problem with statistics is that you can prove anything with them."
"The best way to predict the future is to create it."
"The future is uncertain, but it is also full of possibilities."
"The most important thing in science is to have a good question."
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Trust should be calibrated carefully: don't assume experts have all the answers. Fermi playfully warns that physicists — including himself — make mistakes, overstate certainty, and deserve scrutiny. He's urging intellectual independence and skepticism toward authority figures, not religious doubt. The real risk isn't questioning God; it's blindly deferring to credentialed experts who are themselves fallible and routinely wrong.
Fermi embodied rigorous skepticism — his famous estimation techniques existed precisely to check assumptions, including those of fellow physicists. Having built the first nuclear reactor in 1942 and worked alongside Manhattan Project scientists prone to overconfidence, he knew experts failed routinely. His dry wit was legendary among Chicago students, and this line captures his habit of undercutting scientific arrogance with humor.
After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, physicists commanded extraordinary public reverence. The late 1940s and early 1950s saw nuclear scientists treated as near-prophets shaping Cold War policy and public imagination. Yet physicists bitterly debated hydrogen bomb development, radiation risks, and arms control. Fermi, working at Chicago from 1945 until his 1954 death, watched confident experts contradict one another, making skepticism toward his own profession entirely warranted.
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