TODAY IN SCIENCE HISTORY ®  •  TODAYINSCI ®
Celebrating 24 Years on the Web
Find science on or your birthday

Today in Science History - Quickie Quiz
Who said: “The path towards sustainable energy sources will be long and sometimes difficult. But America cannot resist this transition, we must lead it... That is how we will preserve our planet, commanded to our care by God. That�s what will lend meaning to the creed our fathers once declared.”
more quiz questions >>
Home > Category Index for Science Quotations > Category Index U > Category: Unravel

Unravel Quotes (16 quotes)

An honest man, armed with all the knowledge available to us now, could only state that in some sense, the origin of life appears at the moment to be almost a miracle, so many are the conditions which would have had to have been satisfied to get it going. But this should not be taken to imply that there are good reasons to believe that it could not have started on the earth by a perfectly reasonable sequence of fairly ordinary chemical reactions. The plain fact is that the time available was too long, the many microenvironments on the earth’s surface too diverse, the various chemical possibilities too numerous and our own knowledge and imagination too feeble to allow us to be able to unravel exactly how it might or might not have happened such a long time ago, especially as we have no experimental evidence from that era to check our ideas against.
In Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature (1981), 88.
Science quotes on:  |  Against (332)  |  Arm (82)  |  Available (80)  |  Chemical (303)  |  Chemical Reaction (17)  |  Chemical Reactions (13)  |  Condition (362)  |  Earth (1076)  |  Era (51)  |  Evidence (267)  |  Experimental (193)  |  Fact (1257)  |  Good (906)  |  Happen (282)  |  Happened (88)  |  Honest (53)  |  Idea (881)  |  Imagination (349)  |  Knowledge (1647)  |  Life (1870)  |  Long (778)  |  Man (2252)  |  Miracle (85)  |  Moment (260)  |  Numerous (70)  |  Ordinary (167)  |  Origin (250)  |  Origin Of Life (37)  |  Reaction (106)  |  Reason (766)  |  Sense (785)  |  Sequence (68)  |  Start (237)  |  State (505)  |  Surface (223)  |  Time (1911)  |  Various (205)

Any true Sherlock Holmes of science, possest of an adequate knowledge of first principles, may unravel a very tangled web of mystery. The great naturalist requires but a few pieces of bone from any prehistoric monster in order to ascertain whether it was herbivorous or carnivorous, reptile or mammal, or even to construct a counterpart of its entire skeleton.
In The Science of Poetry and the Philosophy of Language (1910), ix.
Science quotes on:  |  Adequate (50)  |  Ascertain (41)  |  Bone (101)  |  Carnivorous (7)  |  Construct (129)  |  Counterpart (11)  |  Entire (50)  |  Knowledge (1647)  |  Mammal (41)  |  Monster (33)  |  Mystery (188)  |  Naturalist (79)  |  Piece (39)  |  Prehistoric (12)  |  Principle (530)  |  Reptile (33)  |  Requirement (66)  |  Sherlock Holmes (5)  |  Skeleton (25)  |  Web (17)

At terrestrial temperatures matter has complex properties which are likely to prove most difficult to unravel; but it is reasonable to hope that in the not too distant future we shall be competent to understand so simple a thing as a star.
The Internal Constitution of Stars, Cambridge. (1926, 1988), 393.
Science quotes on:  |  Complex (202)  |  Difficult (263)  |  Future (467)  |  Hope (321)  |  Matter (821)  |  Most (1728)  |  Prove (261)  |  Simple (426)  |  Star (460)  |  Temperature (82)  |  Terrestrial (62)  |  Thing (1914)  |  Understand (648)

I trust ... I have succeeded in convincing you that modern chemistry is not, as it has so long appeared, an ever-growing accumulation of isolated facts, as impossible for a single intellect to co-ordinate as for a single memory to grasp.
The intricate formulae that hang upon these walls, and the boundless variety of phenomena they illustrate, are beginning to be for us as a labyrinth once impassable, but to which we have at length discovered the clue. A sense of mastery and power succeeds in our minds to the sort of weary despair with which we at first contemplated their formidable array. For now, by the aid of a few general principles, we find ourselves able to unravel the complexities of these formulae, to marshal the compounds which they represent in orderly series; nay, even to multiply their numbers at our will, and in a great measure to forecast their nature ere we have called them into existence. It is the great movement of modern chemistry that we have thus, for an hour, seen passing before us. It is a movement as of light spreading itself over a waste of obscurity, as of law diffusing order throughout a wilderness of confusion, and there is surely in its contemplation something of the pleasure which attends the spectacle of a beautiful daybreak, something of the grandeur belonging to the conception of a world created out of chaos.
Concluding remark for paper presented at the Friday Discourse of the the Royal Institution (7 Apr 1865). 'On the Combining Power of Atoms', Proceedings of the Royal Institution (1865), 4, No. 42, 416.
Science quotes on:  |  Accumulation (51)  |  Aid (101)  |  Attend (67)  |  Beautiful (271)  |  Beginning (312)  |  Belonging (36)  |  Boundless (28)  |  Call (781)  |  Chaos (99)  |  Chemistry (376)  |  Clue (20)  |  Complexity (121)  |  Compound (117)  |  Conception (160)  |  Confusion (61)  |  Contemplation (75)  |  Despair (40)  |  Discover (571)  |  Existence (481)  |  Fact (1257)  |  Facts (553)  |  Find (1014)  |  First (1302)  |  Forecast (15)  |  Formula (102)  |  General (521)  |  Grandeur (35)  |  Great (1610)  |  Growing (99)  |  Hang (46)  |  Hour (192)  |  Impossible (263)  |  Intellect (251)  |  Intricate (29)  |  Isolated (15)  |  Labyrinth (12)  |  Law (913)  |  Light (635)  |  Long (778)  |  Mastery (36)  |  Measure (241)  |  Memory (144)  |  Mind (1377)  |  Modern (402)  |  Movement (162)  |  Multiply (40)  |  Nature (2017)  |  Number (710)  |  Obscurity (28)  |  Order (638)  |  Orderly (38)  |  Ourselves (247)  |  Passing (76)  |  Pleasure (191)  |  Power (771)  |  Principle (530)  |  Represent (157)  |  Sense (785)  |  Series (153)  |  Single (365)  |  Something (718)  |  Spectacle (35)  |  Succeed (114)  |  Surely (101)  |  Throughout (98)  |  Trust (72)  |  Variety (138)  |  Wall (71)  |  Waste (109)  |  Weary (11)  |  Wilderness (57)  |  Will (2350)  |  World (1850)

Learning how to access a continuity of common sense can be one of your most efficient accomplishments in this decade. Can you imagine common sense surpassing science and technology in the quest to unravel the human stress mess? In time, society will have a new measure for confirming truth. It’s inside the people-not at the mercy of current scientific methodology. Let scientists facilitate discovery, but not invent your inner truth.
…...
Science quotes on:  |  Access (21)  |  Accomplishment (102)  |  Common (447)  |  Common Sense (136)  |  Confirm (58)  |  Continuity (39)  |  Current (122)  |  Decade (66)  |  Discovery (837)  |  Efficient (34)  |  Facilitate (6)  |  Human (1512)  |  Imagine (176)  |  Inner (72)  |  Inside (30)  |  Invent (57)  |  Learn (672)  |  Learning (291)  |  Let (64)  |  Measure (241)  |  Mercy (12)  |  Mess (14)  |  Methodology (14)  |  Most (1728)  |  New (1273)  |  People (1031)  |  Quest (39)  |  Science And Technology (46)  |  Scientific (955)  |  Scientist (881)  |  Sense (785)  |  Society (350)  |  Stress (22)  |  Surpass (33)  |  Surpassing (12)  |  Technology (281)  |  Time (1911)  |  Truth (1109)  |  Will (2350)

Mere infants of the universe, with no feel for infinity, no sense of place in time and space, we human beings have yet to comprehend the enormity of what we are doing: In a geological second, we are unraveling complexities it took eternity to create.
In Jacques Cousteau and Susan Schiefelbein, The Human, the Orchid, and the Octopus: Exploring and Conserving Our Natural World (2007), 107.
Science quotes on:  |  Being (1276)  |  Complexity (121)  |  Comprehend (44)  |  Create (245)  |  Doing (277)  |  Enormity (4)  |  Eternity (64)  |  Feel (371)  |  Geological (11)  |  Human (1512)  |  Human Being (185)  |  Infant (26)  |  Infinity (96)  |  Place (192)  |  Second (66)  |  Sense (785)  |  Space (523)  |  Time (1911)  |  Time And Space (39)  |  Universe (900)

The greatest enemy, however, to true arithmetic work is found in so-called practical or illustrative problems, which are freely given to our pupils, of a degree of difficulty and complexity altogether unsuited to their age and mental development. … I am, myself, no bad mathematician, and all the reasoning powers with which nature endowed me have long been as fully developed as they are ever likely to be; but I have, not infrequently, been puzzled, and at times foiled, by the subtle logical difficulty running through one of these problems, given to my own children. The head-master of one of our Boston high schools confessed to me that he had sometimes been unable to unravel one of these tangled skeins, in trying to help his own daughter through her evening’s work. During this summer, Dr. Fairbairn, the distinguished head of one of the colleges of Oxford, England, told me that not only had he himself encountered a similar difficulty, in the case of his own children, but that, on one occasion, having as his guest one of the first mathematicians of England, the two together had been completely puzzled by one of these arithmetical conundrums.
Address before the Grammar-School Section of the Massachusetts Teachers’ Association (25 Nov 1887), 'The Teaching of Arithmetic in the Boston Schools', printed The Academy (Jan 1888). Collected in Francis Amasa Walker, Discussions in Education (1899), 253.
Science quotes on:  |  Age (509)  |  Arithmetic (144)  |  Bad (185)  |  Boston (7)  |  Call (781)  |  Children (201)  |  College (71)  |  Completely (137)  |  Complexity (121)  |  Confess (42)  |  Conundrum (3)  |  Daughter (30)  |  Degree (277)  |  Develop (278)  |  Development (441)  |  Difficulty (201)  |  Distinguish (168)  |  Distinguished (84)  |  Endowed (52)  |  Enemy (86)  |  First (1302)  |  Greatest (330)  |  High (370)  |  Himself (461)  |  Long (778)  |  Master (182)  |  Mental (179)  |  Myself (211)  |  Nature (2017)  |  Occasion (87)  |  Oxford (16)  |  Power (771)  |  Practical (225)  |  Problem (731)  |  Pupil (62)  |  Reasoning (212)  |  Running (61)  |  School (227)  |  So-Called (71)  |  Summer (56)  |  Teaching of Mathematics (39)  |  Through (846)  |  Time (1911)  |  Together (392)  |  True (239)  |  Trying (144)  |  Two (936)  |  Work (1402)

The origin and the causes of disease are far too recondite for the human mind to unravel them.
Praxi Medica (1696), Introduction.
Science quotes on:  |  Cause (561)  |  Disease (340)  |  Human (1512)  |  Human Mind (133)  |  Mind (1377)  |  Origin (250)  |  Recondite (8)

The quantum is that embarrassing little piece of thread that always hangs from the sweater of space-time. Pull it and the whole thing unravels.
Star Wave: Mind Consciousness of Quantum Physics, 1984
Science quotes on:  |  Embarrassing (3)  |  Hang (46)  |  Little (717)  |  Piece (39)  |  Pull (43)  |  Quantum (118)  |  Space (523)  |  Space-Time (20)  |  Thing (1914)  |  Thread (36)  |  Time (1911)  |  Whole (756)

The truly awesome intellectuals in our history have not merely made discoveries; they have woven variegated, but firm, tapestries of comprehensive coverage. The tapestries have various fates: Most burn or unravel in the foot steps of time and the fires of later discovery. But their glory lies in their integrity as unified structures of great complexity and broad implication.
…...
Science quotes on:  |  Awesome (15)  |  Broad (28)  |  Burn (99)  |  Complexity (121)  |  Comprehensive (29)  |  Discovery (837)  |  Fate (76)  |  Fire (203)  |  Firm (47)  |  Foot (65)  |  Glory (66)  |  Great (1610)  |  History (716)  |  Implication (25)  |  Integrity (21)  |  Intellectual (258)  |  Late (119)  |  Lie (370)  |  Merely (315)  |  Most (1728)  |  Step (234)  |  Structure (365)  |  Tapestry (5)  |  Time (1911)  |  Truly (118)  |  Unified (10)  |  Various (205)  |  Weave (21)

Through the naturalist’s eyes, a sparrow can be as interesting as a bird of paradise, the behaviour of a mouse as interesting as that of a tiger, and a humble lizard as fascinating as a crocodile. … Our planet is beautifully intricate, brimming over with enigmas to be solved and riddles to be unravelled.
In The Amateur Naturalist (1989), 7.
Science quotes on:  |  Beautiful (271)  |  Behavior (95)  |  Behaviour (42)  |  Bird (163)  |  Bird Of Paradise (2)  |  Brimming (4)  |  Crocodile (14)  |  Enigma (16)  |  Eye (440)  |  Fascinating (38)  |  Humble (54)  |  Interest (416)  |  Interesting (153)  |  Intricate (29)  |  Lizard (7)  |  Mouse (33)  |  Naturalist (79)  |  Paradise (15)  |  Planet (402)  |  Riddle (28)  |  Solve (145)  |  Sparrow (6)  |  Through (846)  |  Tiger (7)

Time is in itself [not] a difficulty, but a time-rate, assumed on very insufficient grounds, is used as a master-key, whether or not it fits, to unravel all difficulties. What if it were suggested that the brick-built Pyramid of Hawara had been laid brick by brick by a single workman? Given time, this would not be beyond the bounds of possibility. But Nature, like the Pharaohs, had greater forces at her command to do the work better and more expeditiously than is admitted by Uniformitarians.
'The Position of Geology', The Nineteenth Century (1893), 34, 551.
Science quotes on:  |  Better (493)  |  Beyond (316)  |  Bound (120)  |  Brick (20)  |  Command (60)  |  Difficulty (201)  |  Do (1905)  |  Fit (139)  |  Force (497)  |  Greater (288)  |  Ground (222)  |  Key (56)  |  Master (182)  |  More (2558)  |  Nature (2017)  |  Pharaoh (4)  |  Possibility (172)  |  Rate (31)  |  Single (365)  |  Time (1911)  |  Uniformitarianism (9)  |  Unraveling (3)  |  Work (1402)  |  Workman (13)

Unless there exist peculiar institutions for the support of such inquirers, or unless the Government directly interfere, the contriver of a thaumatrope may derive profit from his ingenuity, whilst he who unravels the laws of light and vision, on which multitudes of phenomena depend, shall descend unrewarded to the tomb.
Reflections on the Decline of Science in England (1830), 19.
Science quotes on:  |  Depend (238)  |  Derive (70)  |  Descend (49)  |  Exist (458)  |  Government (116)  |  Ingenuity (42)  |  Inquirer (9)  |  Institution (73)  |  Interfere (17)  |  Inventor (79)  |  Law (913)  |  Light (635)  |  Money (178)  |  Multitude (50)  |  Peculiar (115)  |  Profit (56)  |  Research (753)  |  Support (151)  |  Tomb (15)  |  Vision (127)

What a deep faith in the rationality of the structure of the world and what a longing to understand even a small glimpse of the reason revealed in the world there must have been in Kepler and Newton to enable them to unravel the mechanism of the heavens in long years of lonely work!
'Religion and Science', The New York Times (9 Nov 1930), Sunday Magazine, 1.
Science quotes on:  |  Deep (241)  |  Enable (122)  |  Faith (209)  |  Heaven (266)  |  Heavens (125)  |  Johannes Kepler (95)  |  Lonely (24)  |  Long (778)  |  Longing (19)  |  Mechanism (102)  |  Must (1525)  |  Sir Isaac Newton (363)  |  Rationality (25)  |  Reason (766)  |  Reveal (152)  |  Revealed (59)  |  Science And Religion (337)  |  Small (489)  |  Structure (365)  |  Understand (648)  |  Universe (900)  |  Work (1402)  |  World (1850)  |  Year (963)

What we still designate as chance, merely depends on a concatenation of circumstances, the internal connection and final causes of which we have as yet been unable to unravel.
Force and Matter (1884), 226.
Science quotes on:  |  Cause (561)  |  Chance (244)  |  Circumstance (139)  |  Circumstances (108)  |  Connection (171)  |  Depend (238)  |  Final (121)  |  Internal (69)  |  Merely (315)  |  Still (614)

Whatever the subject of any investigation may be, whether poetry, biology, ethics or torpedo warfare, the same scientific method of procedure must be followed. We must first unravel the complex and heterogeneous back to first principles, and then reason forward from the simple to the complex, from the homogeneous to the heterogeneous, from what we know to what we would learn. Such are the methods pursued by all successful inventors, scientific investigators and discoverers.
In The Science of Poetry and the Philosophy of Language (1910), ix.
Science quotes on:  |  Biology (232)  |  Complex (202)  |  Discoverer (43)  |  Ethics (53)  |  Heterogeneous (4)  |  Homogeneous (17)  |  Inventor (79)  |  Investigation (250)  |  Learning (291)  |  Method (531)  |  Poetry (150)  |  Principle (530)  |  Procedure (48)  |  Pursue (63)  |  Reason (766)  |  Scientific Method (200)  |  Simple (426)  |  Success (327)  |  Warfare (12)


Carl Sagan Thumbnail In science it often happens that scientists say, 'You know that's a really good argument; my position is mistaken,' and then they would actually change their minds and you never hear that old view from them again. They really do it. It doesn't happen as often as it should, because scientists are human and change is sometimes painful. But it happens every day. I cannot recall the last time something like that happened in politics or religion. (1987) -- Carl Sagan
Quotations by:Albert EinsteinIsaac NewtonLord KelvinCharles DarwinSrinivasa RamanujanCarl SaganFlorence NightingaleThomas EdisonAristotleMarie CurieBenjamin FranklinWinston ChurchillGalileo GalileiSigmund FreudRobert BunsenLouis PasteurTheodore RooseveltAbraham LincolnRonald ReaganLeonardo DaVinciMichio KakuKarl PopperJohann GoetheRobert OppenheimerCharles Kettering  ... (more people)

Quotations about:Atomic  BombBiologyChemistryDeforestationEngineeringAnatomyAstronomyBacteriaBiochemistryBotanyConservationDinosaurEnvironmentFractalGeneticsGeologyHistory of ScienceInventionJupiterKnowledgeLoveMathematicsMeasurementMedicineNatural ResourceOrganic ChemistryPhysicsPhysicianQuantum TheoryResearchScience and ArtTeacherTechnologyUniverseVolcanoVirusWind PowerWomen ScientistsX-RaysYouthZoology  ... (more topics)
Sitewide search within all Today In Science History pages:
Visit our Science and Scientist Quotations index for more Science Quotes from archaeologists, biologists, chemists, geologists, inventors and inventions, mathematicians, physicists, pioneers in medicine, science events and technology.

Names index: | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

Categories index: | 1 | 2 | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
Thank you for sharing.
- 100 -
Sophie Germain
Gertrude Elion
Ernest Rutherford
James Chadwick
Marcel Proust
William Harvey
Johann Goethe
John Keynes
Carl Gauss
Paul Feyerabend
- 90 -
Antoine Lavoisier
Lise Meitner
Charles Babbage
Ibn Khaldun
Euclid
Ralph Emerson
Robert Bunsen
Frederick Banting
Andre Ampere
Winston Churchill
- 80 -
John Locke
Bronislaw Malinowski
Bible
Thomas Huxley
Alessandro Volta
Erwin Schrodinger
Wilhelm Roentgen
Louis Pasteur
Bertrand Russell
Jean Lamarck
- 70 -
Samuel Morse
John Wheeler
Nicolaus Copernicus
Robert Fulton
Pierre Laplace
Humphry Davy
Thomas Edison
Lord Kelvin
Theodore Roosevelt
Carolus Linnaeus
- 60 -
Francis Galton
Linus Pauling
Immanuel Kant
Martin Fischer
Robert Boyle
Karl Popper
Paul Dirac
Avicenna
James Watson
William Shakespeare
- 50 -
Stephen Hawking
Niels Bohr
Nikola Tesla
Rachel Carson
Max Planck
Henry Adams
Richard Dawkins
Werner Heisenberg
Alfred Wegener
John Dalton
- 40 -
Pierre Fermat
Edward Wilson
Johannes Kepler
Gustave Eiffel
Giordano Bruno
JJ Thomson
Thomas Kuhn
Leonardo DaVinci
Archimedes
David Hume
- 30 -
Andreas Vesalius
Rudolf Virchow
Richard Feynman
James Hutton
Alexander Fleming
Emile Durkheim
Benjamin Franklin
Robert Oppenheimer
Robert Hooke
Charles Kettering
- 20 -
Carl Sagan
James Maxwell
Marie Curie
Rene Descartes
Francis Crick
Hippocrates
Michael Faraday
Srinivasa Ramanujan
Francis Bacon
Galileo Galilei
- 10 -
Aristotle
John Watson
Rosalind Franklin
Michio Kaku
Isaac Asimov
Charles Darwin
Sigmund Freud
Albert Einstein
Florence Nightingale
Isaac Newton


by Ian Ellis
who invites your feedback
Thank you for sharing.
Today in Science History
Sign up for Newsletter
with quiz, quotes and more.