Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Science is about principles. It's about concepts. It's not about memorizing the parts of a flower. It helps to know some of these things, but if that's all you do that's not science, science is about principles and concepts.
Michio Kaku
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Michio Kaku
Age: 77
Born: 1947
Born: January 24
Futurist
Non-Fiction Writer
Physicist
Radio Personality
Science Communicator
Science Writer
Theoretical Physicist
University Teacher
San Jose
California
Things
Memorizing
Helps
Concepts
Parts
Flower
Principles
Science
Helping
More quotes by Michio Kaku
I think Newton would be the greatest scientist who ever lived.
Michio Kaku
We've done a miserable job of preparing people for today's world, let alone tomorrow's.
Michio Kaku
I agree, along with Carl Sagan, that we should eventually become a two planet species. Life is too precious to place on a single planet.
Michio Kaku
We believe that black holes collapse to rings hitting very fast. If you follow through the ring you don't die. The mathematics says you fall straight through, perhaps to another universe.
Michio Kaku
In the beginning God said, the four-dimensional divergence of an antisymmetric, second rank tensor equals zero, and there was light, and it was good. And on the seventh day he rested.
Michio Kaku
If you could meet your grandkids as elderly citizens in the year 2100 … you would view them as being, basically, Greek gods… that's where we're headed.
Michio Kaku
What do oil company executives, vampires and NASA bureaucrats all have in common? They fear solar energy.
Michio Kaku
We can summarize electricity, magnetism and gravity into equations one inch long, and that's the power of field theory. And so I said to myself: I will create a field theory of strings. And when I did it one day, it was incredible, realizing that on a sheet of paper I can write down an equation which summarized almost all physical knowledge.
Michio Kaku
No one knows who wrote the laws of physics or where they come from. Science is based on testable, reproducible evidence, and so far we cannot test the universe before the Big Bang.
Michio Kaku
In string theory, all particles are vibrations on a tiny rubber band physics is the harmonies on the string chemistry is the melodies we play on vibrating strings the universe is a symphony of strings, and the Mind of God is cosmic music resonating in 11 dimensional hyperspace.
Michio Kaku
For most of human history, we could only watch, like bystanders, the beautiful dance of Nature. But today, we are on the cusp of an epoch-making transition, from being passive observers of Nature to being active choreographers of Nature. The Age of Discovery in science is coming to a close, opening up an Age of Mastery.
Michio Kaku
There's the caveman in us. The caveman in you says, I want direct contact. I don't want a picture. The caveman in our body says once in a while, we have to go outside. We have to meet real people, talk to real people, and do real things.
Michio Kaku
When we're born, we want to know why the stars shine. We want to know why the sun rises.
Michio Kaku
It's pointless to have a nice clean desk, because it means you're not doing anything.
Michio Kaku
There are dangers, but only dangers if people don't understand where technology is taking us.
Michio Kaku
The river of time may fork into rivers, in which case you have a parallel reality and so then you can become a time traveler and not have to worry about causing a time paradox.
Michio Kaku
What we usually consider as impossible are simply engineering problems... there's no law of physics preventing them.
Michio Kaku
Physics is often stranger than science fiction, and I think science fiction takes its cues from physics: higher dimensions, wormholes, the warping of space and time, stuff like that.
Michio Kaku
In the future, I can imagine that we will genetically modify ourselves using the genes that have doubled our life span since we were chimpanzees.
Michio Kaku
The most likely possibility, favored by current data, is that the universe will die in Ice, not Fire. However, personally I believe that trillions of years from now, we (if we are still around) will have the technology to leave the universe, perhaps in an interdimensional life boat, and move to a warmer universe.
Michio Kaku