The goal of scientists is you hope that the thing you're working on is bigger than the thing you're pipetting into that tube at that moment.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If you look at winners of the Nobel Prize in biology, you'll find a fair smattering of people who don't know how to work a pipette.
Prior to inventing the Geyser Tube toy, dropping a stack of Mentos into a bottle of soda was not always an easy task. The Geyser Tube makes it easy to get a perfect launch every time at heights of 30 feet or more. Tell me... who doesn't like to see soda shooting 30 feet into the air, all in the name of science?
Sometime in the future, I am a hundred percent certain scientists will sit down at a computer terminal, design what they want the organism to do, and build it.
It is crucial for scientists to be willing to be wrong; otherwise, you might not do the most important experiments, or you may ignore your most important findings.
Every scientist would like to be able to move through research faster, to spend less time and money acquiring material or disseminating it.
Scientists have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge.
Just because scientists have the knowledge to do it, the technology to do it, and some may even have a financial motive or other incentive to do it, does not make it right.
As a scientist, I clearly see the potential for harnessing the power of nature.
Scientists dream about doing great things. Engineers do them.
If you put somebody on a crack pipe and give them a 9 mm Baretta, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what's going to happen next.