Lisa Randall famous quotes
Last updated: Sep 5, 2024
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Creativity is essential to particle physics, cosmology, and to mathematics, and to other fields of science, just as it is to its more widely acknowledged beneficiaries - the arts and humanities.
-- Lisa Randall -
Travel at faster than the speed of light certainly can have dramatic implications that are difficult to understand, such as time travel.
-- Lisa Randall -
An almost indispensable skill for any creative person is the ability to pose the right questions. Creative people identify promising, exciting, and, most important, accessible routes to progress - and eventually formulate the questions correctly.
-- Lisa Randall -
There is real confusion about what it means to be right and wrong - the difference between what spiritual beliefs are and what science is.
-- Lisa Randall -
Scientific research involves going beyond the well-trodden and well-tested ideas and theories that form the core of scientific knowledge. During the time scientists are working things out, some results will be right, and others will be wrong. Over time, the right results will emerge.
-- Lisa Randall -
I considered going into business or becoming a lawyer - not for the money, but for the thrill of problem-solving.
-- Lisa Randall -
Both religions and musicals work best with energetic and committed believers. Cynicism or detachment would have destroyed the magic - something true of religion, too.
-- Lisa Randall -
You can be only a modest distance away from the gravity brane, and gravity will be incredibly weak.
-- Lisa Randall -
I think it's a problem that people are considered immoral if they're not religious. That's just not true.... If you do something for a religious reason, you do it because you'll be rewarded in an afterlife or in this world. That's not quite as good as something you do for purely generous reasons.
-- Lisa Randall -
Faith just doesn't have anything to do with what I'm doing as a scientist. It's nice if you can believe in God, because then you see more of a purpose in things. Even if you don't, though, it doesn't mean that there's no purpose. It doesn't mean that there's no goodness. I think that there's a virtue in being good in and of itself. I think that one can work with the world we have.
-- Lisa Randall -
When people try to use religion to address the natural world, science pushes back on it, and religion has to accommodate the results. Beliefs can be permanent, but beliefs can also be flexible. Personally, if IÂ find out my belief is wrong, I change my mind. IÂ think that's a good way to live.
-- Lisa Randall -
Physicists have yet to understand why the Higgs boson's mass is what it is,
-- Lisa Randall -
Our hypotheses are initially rooted in theoretical consistency and elegance, but...ultimatel y it is experiment not rigid belief that determines what is correct.
-- Lisa Randall -
We should figure out how to do this so that some parents don't feel disenfranchised, angry and upset. It says a lot about the state of where we are in the city, the role of parents and the reality of small school and combining schools.
-- Lisa Randall -
Speculation and the exploration of ideas beyond what we know with certainty are what lead to progress.
-- Lisa Randall -
If such external influences are intrinsic to religion, then logic and scientific thought dictate that there must be a mechanism by which this influence is transmitted. A religious or spiritual belief that involves an invisible undetectable force that nonetheless influences human actions and behavior or that of the world itself produces a situation in which a believer has no choice but to have faith and abandon logic--or simply not care.
-- Lisa Randall -
When it comes to the world around us, is there any choice but to explore?
-- Lisa Randall -
Secrets of the cosmos will begin to unravel. I, for one, can't wait.
-- Lisa Randall -
When I was in school I liked math because all the problems had answers. Everything else seemed very subjective.
-- Lisa Randall -
You might find it hard to imagine gravity as a weak force, but consider that a small magnet can hold up a paper clip, even though the entire earth is pulling down on it.
-- Lisa Randall -
We certainly don't yet know all the answers. But the universe is about to be pried open.
-- Lisa Randall -
The universe has its secrets. Extra dimensions of space might be one of them. If so, the universe has been hiding those dimensions, protecting them, keeping them coyly under wraps. From a casual glance, you would never suspect a thing.
-- Lisa Randall -
There are many aspects of time we just do not understand. That's the thing about writing a popular book: You realize the things you understand because for those you can give a really simple explanation. But some things about time I just don't know how to give simple explanations for, even though I can tell you mathematically what's going on.
-- Lisa Randall -
Physics has entered a remarkable era. Ideas that were once the realm of science fiction are now entering our theoretical — and maybe even experimental — grasp. Brand-new theoretical discoveries about extra dimensions have irreversibly changed how particle physicists, astrophysicists, and cosmologists now think about the world. The sheer number and pace of discoveries tells us that we've most likely only scratched the surface of the wondrous possibilities that lie in store. Ideas have taken on a life of their own.
-- Lisa Randall -
You have to be careful when you use beauty as a guide. There are many theories people didn't think were beautiful at the time but did find beautiful later—and vice versa. I think simplicity is a good guide: The more economical a theory, the better.
-- Lisa Randall -
One of the nice things about math and science is it's obvious, you get the answer or you don't get the answer.
-- Lisa Randall -
Scientists actively approach the door to knowledge—the boundary of the domain of what we know. We question and explore and we change our views when facts and logic force us to do so. We are confident only in what we can verify through experiments or in what we can deduce from experimentally confirmed hypotheses.
-- Lisa Randall -
Although I was first drawn to math and science by the certainty they promised, today I find the unanswered questions and the unexpected connections at least as attractive.
-- Lisa Randall -
It's hubris to think that the way we see things is everything there is.
-- Lisa Randall -
Science is a combination of theory and experiment and the two together are how you make progress.
-- Lisa Randall
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