Jacob Bronowski Discovery Quotations
Jacob Bronowski Quotes about:
Discovery Quotes from:
- All Discovery Quotes
- Neil Degrasse Tyson
- Albert Einstein
- Henry David Thoreau
- Claude Bernard
- Richard P Feynman
- Jacob Bronowski
- Albert Szent Gyorgyi
- Francis Bacon
- Georg C Lichtenberg
- Thomas A Edison
- Peter Medawar
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Arthur Koestler
- Bertrand Russell
- E O Wilson
- Louis Pasteur
- Wayne Hale
- Benjamin Disraeli
- Bill Nye
- Carl Sagan
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Writing Quotes
The most remarkable discovery made by scientists is science itself. The discovery must be compared in importance with the invention of cave-painting and of writing. Like these earlier human creations, science is an attempt to control our surroundings by entering into them and understanding them from inside. And like them, science has surely made a critical step in human development which cannot be reversed. We cannot conceive a future society without science.
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Missing Quotes
We re-make nature by the act of discovery, in the poem or in the theorem. And the great poem and the deep theorem are new to every reader, and yet are his own experiences, because he himself re-creates them. They are the marks of unity in variety; and in the instant when the mind seizes this for itself, in art or in science, the heart misses a beat.
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Moon Quotes
The act of imagination is the opening of the system so that it shows new connections. Every act of act of imagination is the discovery of likenesses between two things which were thought unlike. An example is Newton’s thinking of the likeness between the thrown apple and moon sailing majestically in the sky. Hence, the ‘discovery’ of the laws of gravity.
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Character Quotes
Progress is the exploration of our own error. Evolution is a consolidation of what have always begun as errors. And errors are of two kinds: errors that turn out to be true and errors that turn out to be false (which are most of them). But they both have the same character of being an imaginative speculation. I say all this because I want very much to talk about the human side of discovery and progress, and it seems to me terribly important to say this in an age in which most non-scientists are feeling a kind of loss of nerve.