A Quote by Albert Szent-Gyorgyi

Research is not a systematic occupation but an intuitive artistic vocation. — © Albert Szent-Gyorgyi
Research is not a systematic occupation but an intuitive artistic vocation.
I remember, when I was young, to have a literary or artistic vocation was really dramatic because you were so isolated from the common world. You felt that you were marginal, and if you dared to try to organise your life around your vocation, you knew you'd be completely segregated.
It's kind of an intuitive process. I wish that it were more systematic, but it just isn't.
I started on the use of the Internet for scientific communication. Our research group was one of the very first to make really systematic use of it as a way of managing research projects.
Still, intuitive assumptions about behavior is only the starting point of systematic analysis, for alone they do not yield many interesting implications.
Beauty is the vocation bestowed on the artist by the Creator in the gift of artistic talent.
The artistic path is a fearless occupation.
Nursing is not only a natural vocation for a woman, but an occupation which increases her matrimonial chances about eighty per cent.
The lawyer has not reached the height of his vocation who does not find therein... scope for a peculiar but genuine artistic function.
A vocation is born to us all; happily most of us meet promptly our twin,--occupation.
Much of outcomes research is a systematic attempt to exploit what is known and make it better.
Macs are not intuitive. It's intuitive to the person who created it. It's not intuitive to me.
You really can't pigeon hole yourself into one particular artistic area any more; the days of one vocation in the arts have long gone.
Everyone has a vocation by which he earns his living, but he also has a vocation in an older sense of the word-the vocation to use his powers and live his life well.
The artistic experience, at its highest, was actually a natural analogue of mystical experience. It produced a kind of intuitive of perception.
I was a stay-at-home mom, with an important job to raise the kids. I filled it into the occupation slot on innumerable immigration cards, looking at the officer with defiant pride. What was I then, now that actively raising my children was no longer my vocation?
There are many experiments and a great deal of research that can be performed on the station that make a difference in our lives and we are committed to supporting this important vocation.
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