“The scientist has to take 95 per cent of his subject on trust. He has to because he can't possibly do all the experiments, therefore he has to take on trust the experiments all his colleagues and predecessors have done. Whereas a mathematician doesn't have to take anything on trust. Any theorem that's proved, he doesn't believe it, really, until he goes through the proof himself, and therefore he knows his whole subject from scratch. He's absolutely 100 per cent certain of it. And that gives him an extraordinary conviction of certainty, and an arrogance that scientists don't have.” KnowsGivingBelieveDoneWholeScienceCertainBeliefSubjectsScientistExtraordinaryConvictionProofExperimentsCertaintyArroganceCentsMathematicianColleaguesScratchesPredecessorsTheorems Author:Christopher Zeeman
“Ghetto-dwellers are the great fantasists. There was an extraordinary vibrancy there, an imaginative life. When you are that poor, all you've got left is your belief in the imagination.” BeliefLeftImaginationPoorExtraordinaryImaginativeGhettoDwellersVibrancy Author:Ben Okri
“Belief gives you the power to achieve the extraordinary” GivingBeliefAchieveExtraordinary Author:Chris Powell
“What a vindication of the belief that ordinary people can do extraordinary things, what a reminder of what Bobby Kennedy once said, about how small actions can be like pebbles being thrown into a still lake, and ripples of hope cascade outwards and change the world.” PeopleWorldSaidStillsActionBeliefCan DoChangeOrdinaryExtraordinaryChanging The WorldThrownLakesOrdinary PeopleRemindersRipplePebblesExtraordinary ThingsVindicationCascadeSmall ActionsBobby Kennedy Author:Barack Obama