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Key to success: Vision Key to success: Passion Key to success: Perseverance Key to success: Preparation Key to success: Courage Key to success: Integrity Key to success: The American Dream Keys to success homepage More quotes on Passion More quotes on Vision More quotes on Courage More quotes on Integrity More quotes on Preparation More quotes on Perseverance More quotes on The American Dream


Twyla Tharp, Dancer and Choreographer

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Twyla Tharp

Dancer and Choreographer

Twyla Tharp: It depends on how you define vision. If it's a sense of the way I enjoyed spending time most was dancing. It was from the time I was a very small child, when I puttered around the house. I was four or five years old, I remember already having a regime. It was the way I always identified myself. If you're speaking of professionally, it was not until I was after college, until I had graduated. So, it was much, much later that I made a professional commitment to it because quite frankly, I didn't think it wise. I was my own interior parental force, and it's very difficult to justify a profession as a dancer because it's very difficult to earn a living; because there's very little continuity, and because just when you arrive at the apex of your skills, it's time to retire. And consequently, it seemed like perhaps a not wise investment of a substantial portion of my life. But as it turned out, I decided that since it was the thing that I felt I did the best, that I owed it to all that be to pursue it. That that was what I had to do, whether it meant I was going to be able to earn a living or not.
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Clyde Tombaugh, Discoverer of Planet Pluto

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Clyde Tombaugh

Discoverer of Planet Pluto

Clyde Tombaugh: Yes, a very strong curiosity about the universe and so on. I just had the urge to see on the other side of the mountain. It was on the moon and the planets and all that you see. I wanted to extend my horizon of interest. It was a challenge to my thought life.
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Clyde Tombaugh, Discoverer of Planet Pluto

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Clyde Tombaugh

Discoverer of Planet Pluto

I have this feeling of wonder what it's like to kind of look there and just sweep around through the Milky Way and say, "Oh there's hundreds and hundreds of stars and star clusters." It gives me a feeling of great elation. It's a therapy for me, just idle, plowing through the sky. It's fun. I wonder about all the wonderful things that must be going on there that we don't see, realizing there are thousands and thousands -- millions -- of alien civilizations out there, doing things, maybe something like we are. This is something you think about.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

Charles Townes: What interested me about science really is our universe. And just everything about the universe. I like to understand and see. I lived on a small farm when I was young, and would go out and find things, and collect insects and look at trees and look at the stars. And just looking around at nature was what really interested me first, and that was from a very early age.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

Charles Townes: I like to try to understand things. You know, that's a very great human drive, curiosity. What is this world here for? What's it doing? What makes it work? How does it work? It's like solving puzzles. But they're interesting puzzles, in that once you find out something new, in science, then it's the possession of everybody. And everybody else then builds on that. So you're not just solving some puzzle that everybody else has solved once, and then you tear it apart and it has to be solved again. In science, you solve a puzzle, understand something new, and it's exhilarating, and it's everybody's property then, which everybody can use. So it's a permanent contribution.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

We had pets. I would raise animals. I would catch wildlife and raise them. I did carpentry. I also did some electronics and I collected stamps. Classification and understanding things was a great hobby of mine. In almost anything, I would sort of try to identify and collect and try to make work. When one of my cousins, who is an engineer, gave me an old radio set, that was just a great thing. And we'd tinker with the radio set, and made it work. My father used to bring home some broken clocks from a store of a friend he knew, a clockmaker, and we'd have broken clocks. And then we would play with them, and fix them and use the wheels and so on. So I enjoyed building things and making things.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

I liked mathematics. I liked biology. I didn't like chemistry quite as much, because it was -- at that time I was taught a kind of cookbook type of chemistry, not the exciting chemistry which is current today. But physics had so much logic in it. Such firm, demanding logic. One could really figure things out. That particularly attracted me. But I liked the other sciences too. However, at some point I had to decide. Actually, I didn't decide until fairly late. The first course of physics I took was as a sophomore in college. And it was only the end of that year that I decided, "Yes, physics really is what I think I really want to do." I would have been very happy in biology or some other sciences too, I'm sure.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

Charles Townes: What I particularly liked about physics was the tight logic. That you could look at something, and if you figured it out correctly, thought about it carefully, you could be pretty sure. "Yes, this is right," or something else isn't right. Lots of new things to explore, but they were explored through logic, experimentation, but experimentation based on certain logical ideas. So it was the firmness and the definiteness which one could decide what really is right, I think, that attracted me. Plus the fact that it was dealing with what I thought were important ideas. Mathematics appealed to me, and I enjoyed mathematics, but I preferred to do something that involved the real world around me. Real objects, like physics. Even though that also involved mathematics, it was dealing with a sort of real life a little bit more, I felt, than mathematics.
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Charles Townes, Inventor of the Maser & Laser

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Charles Townes

Inventor of the Maser & Laser

Charles Townes: People tell me that I work hard. I never feel that I do particularly, because it's fun. I always say, "Well, I've never worked hard in my life." I'm busy, but most of what I do is enjoyable. It isn't that it's not tedious to some people, and so on, and of course I have routine to do, but I don't mind it. I just don't feel that I'm put upon. I spend a lot of time, but it's fun. It's a very intensive hobby. I would say it's my most serious hobby. I have lots of hobbies, but the one permanent one is science, physics. So yes, I spend a lot of time, and I would agree with Edison, you have to work very hard and intensively. But it's not what the ordinary person calls work to me. It's really interesting, fun, enjoyable, exciting to be thinking about these things.
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