Quotes About Curiosity
Here is a selection from her portfolio.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Instead of trying to produce a programme to simulate the adult mind, why not rather try to produce one which simulates the child's?
~ Walter Isaacson
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Instead of trying to produce a programme to simulate the adult mind, why not rather try to produce one which simulates the child's?" he asked. "If this were then subjected to an appropriate course of education, one would obtain the adult brain.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Sea curioso, infatigablemente curioso.
~ Walter Isaacson
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I did learn from Leonardo how a desire to marvel about the world that we encounter each day can make each moment of our lives richer.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Busque el conocimiento por sí mismo.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Conserve la capacidad de asombro de un niño.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Be open to mystery. Not everything needs sharp lines.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Walter Isaacson
~ The Adoption
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Walter Isaacson
~ undergraduate
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there many afternoons to seek him out. He was entranced
~ Walter Isaacson
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They consider people who don't know Hamlet from Macbeth to be Philistines, yet they might merrily admit that they don't know the difference between a gene and a chromosome, or a transistor and a capacitor, or an integral and differential equation. These concepts might seem difficult. Yes, but so, too, is Hamlet. And like Hamlet, each of these concepts is beautiful. Like an elegant mathematical equation, they are expressions of the glories of the universe.
~ Walter Isaacson
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wanted to build a frequency counter when he was twelve, and he was able to look up Bill
~ Walter Isaacson
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There is one note on the page that seems disconnected from everything else. It is a recipe for making blond-brown hair dye: "To make hair tawny, take nuts and boil them in lye and immerse the comb in it, then comb the hair and let it dry in the sun." This may have been a notation in preparation for a court pageant. But it is more likely, I think, that the recipe is a rare intimate jotting. Leonardo was deep into his thirties by now. Perhaps he was resisting going gray.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Jobs took McCollum's class for only one year, rather than the three that it was offered. For one of his projects, he made a device
~ Walter Isaacson
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That seemed a bit odd. I didn't yet know that taking a long walk was his preferred way
~ Walter Isaacson
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sometimes I don't. It's the great mystery." Paul Jobs was then working at Spectra-Physics, a company in nearby Santa Clara that made lasers for electronics and medical products. As a machinist, he crafted the prototypes of products that the engineers
~ Walter Isaacson
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Marsalis later recalled, "I don't care much about computers, and kept telling him so, but he goes on for two hours. He was a man possessed. After a while, I started looking at him and not the computer, because I was so fascinated with his passion.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Florence flourished in the fifteenth century because it was comfortable with such people. Above all, Leonardo's relentless curiosity and experimentation should remind us of the importance of instilling, in both ourselves and our children, not just received knowledge but a willingness to question it—to be imaginative and, like talented misfits and rebels in any era, to think different.
~ Walter Isaacson
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Jobs quickly became bored with college. He liked being at Reed, just not taking the required classes.
~ Walter Isaacson
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It should not be hard for you to look at stains on walls, or the ashes of a fire, or the clouds, or mud, and if you consider them well you will find marvelous new ideas, because the mind is stimulated to new inventions by obscure things.9
~ Walter Isaacson
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truths, and he wanted to examine everything himself." Dudman allowed Jobs to audit classes and stay with friends in the dorms even after he stopped paying tuition. "The minute I dropped out I could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting," he said. Among them was a calligraphy class that appealed to him
~ Walter Isaacson
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In collecting such a medley of ideas, Leonardo was following a practice that had become popular in Renaissance Italy of keeping a commonplace and sketch book, known as a zibaldone. But in their content, Leonardo's were like nothing the world had ever, or has ever, seen. His notebooks have been rightly called "the most astonishing testament to the powers of human observation and imagination ever set down on paper."3
~ Walter Isaacson
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Walter Isaacson
~ The Blue Box
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