"I suppose the reason I chose electrical engineering was because I had always been interested in electricity, involving myself in such projects as building radios from the time I was a child"
About this Quote
There is a quiet radicalism in how Tanaka frames a life-defining decision as almost embarrassingly simple: curiosity first, credentials later. The line doesn’t reach for destiny or “calling.” It reaches for a childhood workbench, for the tactile thrill of making something crackle to life. That humility is the point. Scientists are often narrated as geniuses springing fully formed from institutions; Tanaka slips the origin story back into the messy, hands-on culture of tinkering, where knowledge begins as play and only gradually hardens into expertise.
The intent is disarmingly practical: he chose electrical engineering because he liked electricity. But the subtext is a defense of intrinsic motivation in a world that pressures students toward prestige tracks and strategic careers. “I suppose” and “the reason” signal a kind of self-editing, as if he’s resisting the urge to mythologize his own trajectory. It’s also a generational marker. For someone born in 1959, building radios as a child evokes Japan’s postwar electronics boom, when consumer tech wasn’t just entertainment but a national project and a household fascination. The radio becomes both a toy and a portal into modernity.
Contextually, coming from a scientist (and notably one associated with breakthrough instrumentation), the quote subtly argues that major innovation often starts with minor, private experiments. The adult achievement is implicitly continuous with the kid soldering components: same impulse, higher stakes. That continuity is what makes the line work - it restores science to a human scale without shrinking its impact.
The intent is disarmingly practical: he chose electrical engineering because he liked electricity. But the subtext is a defense of intrinsic motivation in a world that pressures students toward prestige tracks and strategic careers. “I suppose” and “the reason” signal a kind of self-editing, as if he’s resisting the urge to mythologize his own trajectory. It’s also a generational marker. For someone born in 1959, building radios as a child evokes Japan’s postwar electronics boom, when consumer tech wasn’t just entertainment but a national project and a household fascination. The radio becomes both a toy and a portal into modernity.
Contextually, coming from a scientist (and notably one associated with breakthrough instrumentation), the quote subtly argues that major innovation often starts with minor, private experiments. The adult achievement is implicitly continuous with the kid soldering components: same impulse, higher stakes. That continuity is what makes the line work - it restores science to a human scale without shrinking its impact.
Quote Details
| Topic | Engineer |
|---|---|
| Source | Koichi Tanaka — Biographical note, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2002 (NobelPrize.org); contains his remark about choosing electrical engineering and building radios as a child. |
More Quotes by Koichi
Add to List



