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Science & Tech Quote by George E. Brown, Jr.

"Also by my earliest days, I was fascinated by a utopian vision of what the world could be like. I've thought that science could be the basis for a better world, and that's what I've been trying to do all these years"

About this Quote

There’s a particular kind of political idealism that doesn’t run on slogans or nostalgia, but on blueprints. George E. Brown, Jr. frames his life not as a climb toward power, but as a long experiment in governance: take a “utopian vision,” run it through science, and produce a “better world” that can be built, funded, and measured. For a politician, that’s a telling self-portrait. He’s not claiming moral purity or perfect judgment; he’s claiming method.

The phrase “science could be the basis” does quiet rhetorical work. Science isn’t presented as a tool to win arguments, but as an alternative foundation for politics itself - a way to replace tribal loyalties and short-term dealmaking with something closer to evidence, engineering, and public investment. The utopianism is softened by “could,” a modal verb that admits uncertainty while still insisting on direction. It’s faith, but disciplined faith.

Subtextually, Brown is staking out a minority position in American public life: technocratic optimism. Coming of age in the mid-20th century, he’s drawing on an era when federal research, NASA-scale ambition, and postwar prosperity made “progress” feel like an institutional choice, not a personal fantasy. Read against the late-century backlash - culture-war distrust of experts, budget cutting, and the idea that government can’t do big things - the line feels like both defense and lament.

“I’ve been trying to do” is the most political part: not a promise of arrival, but an argument for sustained commitment. Utopia here isn’t a destination; it’s a rationale for keeping the machinery of democracy pointed toward the measurable.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Jr., George E. Brown,. (2026, January 17). Also by my earliest days, I was fascinated by a utopian vision of what the world could be like. I've thought that science could be the basis for a better world, and that's what I've been trying to do all these years. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/also-by-my-earliest-days-i-was-fascinated-by-a-60052/

Chicago Style
Jr., George E. Brown,. "Also by my earliest days, I was fascinated by a utopian vision of what the world could be like. I've thought that science could be the basis for a better world, and that's what I've been trying to do all these years." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/also-by-my-earliest-days-i-was-fascinated-by-a-60052/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Also by my earliest days, I was fascinated by a utopian vision of what the world could be like. I've thought that science could be the basis for a better world, and that's what I've been trying to do all these years." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/also-by-my-earliest-days-i-was-fascinated-by-a-60052/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

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George E. Brown, Jr. (March 6, 1920 - July 15, 1999) was a Politician from USA.

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