Advice To A Young Scientist Quotes
Advice To A Young Scientist
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Peter Medawar658 ratings, 3.78 average rating, 71 reviews
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Advice To A Young Scientist Quotes
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“I cannot give any scientist of any age better advice than this: the intensity of the conviction that a hypothesis is true has no bearing on whether it is true or not.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“There is no certain way of telling in advance if the day- dreams of a life dedicated to the pursuit of truth will carry a novice through the frustration of seeing experiments fail and of making the dismaying discovery that some of one's favorite ideas are groundless.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“It is not methodologically an exaggeration to say that Fleming eventually found penicillin because he has been looking for it... Good luck is almost always preceded by an expectation that it will gratify. Pasteur is well known to have said that fortune favors the prepared mind, and Fontenelle observed, 'Ces hasards ne sont que pour ceux qui jouent bien !”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“For these reasons a young scientist must not be disheartened if he does not become the eponym of a natural principle phenomenon or disease. Although the importance of discoveries maybe overrated no young scientists need think that he will gain a reputation or high performant merely by compiling information particularly information of the kind nobody really wants. But if he makes the world more easily understandable by any means whether theoretical or experimental he will learn his colleagues gratitude and respect.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“Is common failing ... To fall in love with a hypothesis and to be unwilling to take no for an answer. A Love affair with a pet hypothesis can waste years of precious time. There is very often no finally decisive yes, though quite often there can be a decisive no.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“I am often asked, 'What made you become a scientist?' But I can't stand far enough away from myself to give a really satisfactory answer, for I cannot distinctly remember a time when I did not think that a scientist was the most exciting possible thing to be.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“In choosing topics for research and departments to enlist in, a young scientist must beware of following fashion. It is one thing to fall into step with a great concerted movement of thought such as molecular genetics or cellular immunology, but quite another merely to fall in with prevailing fashion for, say, some new histochemical procedure or technical gimmick.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“But what will a scientist do to resolve his problem? Something of which he can be quite certain is that no more compilation of factual information will serve his purpose. No new truth will declare itself from inside the heap of facts. It is true that Bacon and Comenius and Condorcet too sometimes wrote as if they believed that the collection and classification of empirical facts would lead to an understanding of nature but in taking this view they were guided by a rather special consideration they felt under a strong obligation to refute the idea that deduction was an act of mind that could lead to the discovery of new truth that an act of mind alone could enlarge the understanding. The the philosophic and scientific writing of the 17th century particularly the writing of Bacon, Boyle, and Glanville for example is full of dismissive references to Aristotle's way of thinking in the tradition of which they had all grown up.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“A formal paper should therefore begin with a paragraph of explanation that describes the the problem under investigation and the main lines of the way the author feels he has been able to contribute to its solution. Great pains should be taken over the papers summary which should make use of the whole of the journey's ration of space 1/5 or 1/6 off the length of the text as the case may be”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“It is, in the planning stage, anyway, more like a session of gag writers, for although each one knows, as all scientists know, that having an idea - a brainwave- can be only a personal event, each also knows that an atmosphere can be created in which one member of the team sparks off the others do that they all build upon and develop each other's ideas. In the outcome, nobody is quite sure who thought of what. The main thing is that something was thought of. A young scientist who feels a strong compulsion to say " That was my idea, you know," or "Now that you have all come round to my way of thinking..." is not cut out for collaborative work, and he and his colleagues would do better if he worked in his own.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“.. science and civilization stand shoulder to shoulder in a common endeavor to work for the betterment of mankind.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“There is no quicker way for a scientist to bring discredit upon himself and on his profession than roundly to declare- particularly when no declaration of any kind is called for- that science knows or soon will know the answers to all questions worth asking...”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“A scientist soon discovers that he has become a member of the cast of them in the context "What mischief are they up to now?" Or "They say we shall colonize the Moon in fifty years.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“... broken English is the international language of science. In international congresses the nations are distinguished not by styles of scientific research but by the emergence of different national styles in the delivery of scientific papers.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“.. I have described the art of research as 'the art of the soluble' ... Making a problem soluble by finding out ways of getting at it. To quantify is not to be a scientist, but goodness, it does help.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“As they gain experience scientists reach a stage when they look back upon their own beginnings in research and wonder how they had the temerity to embark upon it considering how thoroughly ignorant and and equipped they were. That may well have been so; but fortunately their temperaments must have been sufficiently sanguine to assure them that they were not likely to fail where so many others not very unlike themselves had succeeded, and sufficiently realistic, too, to understand that their equipment would never be complete down to the last button- that there would always be gaps and shortcomings in their knowledge and that to be any good they would have to go on learning all their lives.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“It is psychologically most important to get results, even if they are not original. Getting results, even by repeating another's work, brings with its great accession of self-confidence: the young scientist feels himself one of the club at last, can chip in at seminars and at scientific meetings with "My own experience was..." Or "I got exactly the same results" or "I'd be inclined to agree that for this particular purpose medium 94 is definitely better than 93", and then can sit down again, tremulous but secretly exultant.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“Too much reading may crab and confine the imagination... The beginner must read, but intently and choosily and not too much.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“Too much reading may crab and confine the imagination.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“The number and complexity of the techniques and supporting disciplines used in research are so large that a novice may easily be frightened into postponing research in order to carry on with the process of 'equipping himself'. As there is no knowing in advance where a research enterprise may lead and what kind of skills it will require as it unfolds, this process of 'equipping oneself' has no predeterminable limits and is bad psychological policy, anyway; we always need to know and understand a great deal more than we do already and to master many more skills than we now possess.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“Whatever may be thought about the Ph.D. treadmill, this new postdoctoral revolution is an unqualifiedly good thing, and it is very much to be hoped that the patrons and benefactors if science will not allow it to languish.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“After graduate students have taken their phd's they must or no account continue with their are PhD work for the remainder of their lives easy and tempting though it is to type up loose ends and wonder down attractive byways.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“Isolation is disagreeable and bad for graduate students. The need to avoid it is one of the best arguments for joining some intellectually bustling concern.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“No, the problem ( necessary to achieve important scientific discoveries) must be such that it matters what the answer is- whether to science generally or to mankind.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“... but conventional wisdom frowns upon it and is greatly opposed to young graduates continuing in the same department; lips are pursed, the evils of academic inbreeding piously rehearsed, and sentiments hardly more lofty or original than that "travel broadens the mind" are urged upon any graduate with an inclination to stay put.
.... Inbreeding is often the way in which a great school of research is built up. If a graduate understands and is proud of the work going on in his department, he may do best to fall into step with people who know where they are going. A graduate student should by all means attach himself to a department doing work that has aroused his enthusiasm, admiration or respect; no good will come of merely going wherever a job offers, irrespective of the work in progress.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
.... Inbreeding is often the way in which a great school of research is built up. If a graduate understands and is proud of the work going on in his department, he may do best to fall into step with people who know where they are going. A graduate student should by all means attach himself to a department doing work that has aroused his enthusiasm, admiration or respect; no good will come of merely going wherever a job offers, irrespective of the work in progress.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“...today, a young hopeful attaches himself as a graduate student to some senior scientist and hopes to learn his trade and be rewarded by a master's degree or doctorate of philosophy bad evidence that he has done so.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“I mean application, diligence, a sense of purpose, the power to concentrate, to persevere and not be cast down by adversity_by finding out after long and weary inquiry, for example, that a dearly loved hypothesis bis in large measure mistaken.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“... the satisfaction of Knowing that something is known..”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“A novice must stick it out until he discovered whether the rewards and compensations of a scientific life are for him commensurate with the disappointments and the toil; but if once a scientist experiences the exhilaration of discovery and the satisfaction of carrying through a really tricky experiment- once he has felt that deeper and more expansive feeling Freud has called the "oceanic feeling" that is the reward for any real advancement of the understanding- then he is hooked and no other kind of life will do.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
“... It is my recollection of these bad times that accounts for the earnestness of my advice to young scientists that they should have more than one string to their bow and should be willing to take no for an answer if the evidence points that way.”
― Advice To A Young Scientist
― Advice To A Young Scientist
