The ideas of science germinate in a matrix of established knowledge gained by experiment; they are not lonesome thoughts, born in a rarified realm where no researcher has ever gone before.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Indeed science alone may perhaps be sterile when pursued without an understanding of the world in which scientific knowledge is created and in which the fruits of science are used.
Science always has its origin in the adaptation of thought to some definite field of experience.
An inborn tendency toward science turning it into a lifelong commitment.
Although scientists can often be as resistant to new ideas as anyone, the process of science ensures that, over time, good ideas and theories prevail.
I think that's something a scientist can do because a scientist works at a border, at the edge of science, at the edge of knowledge, and so there's a lot of fun of reaching out and thinking about things that other people didn't think about. And so it has a kind of exploratory notion, kind of adventurous part in it.
Anecdotal thinking comes naturally; science requires training.
Science is imagination in the service of the verifiable truth, and that service is indeed communal. It cannot be rigidly planned. Rather, it requires freedom and courage and the plural contributions of many different kinds of people who must maintain their individuality while giving to the group.
Science is nothing, but trained and organized common sense.
Science sometimes falls short when trying to fathom the depths of our essence - and our inspiration comes from that essence.
Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.