Skip to main content

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

"Industrial opportunities are going to stem more from the biological sciences than from chemistry and physics. I see biology as being the greatest area of scientific breakthroughs in the next generation"

About this Quote

Brown is doing two things at once: forecasting a scientific shift and quietly redrawing the map of where public money should go. As a politician steeped in postwar science policy, he’s speaking from a moment when “big science” meant physics (Manhattan Project prestige) and chemistry (industrial dominance), but the ground was already moving under those hierarchies. The Human Genome Project had begun, biotech firms were turning lab techniques into patents, and “biology” was starting to look less like fieldwork and more like an engine of capital.

The phrasing is the tell. “Industrial opportunities” is a deliberately non-romantic way to talk about life science; it translates discovery into jobs, competitiveness, and manufacturable products. That’s not an accident. It’s the language that sells research to appropriators and skeptical taxpayers: not wonder, but return on investment. Brown’s subtext is a coalition pitch - to universities, emerging biotech, and federal agencies - that the next era of American prosperity won’t come from splitting atoms but from reading, editing, and engineering living systems.

Calling biology “the greatest area” also functions as a corrective to disciplinary prestige. Biology had long been treated as messy and descriptive compared to the clean laws of physics. Brown flips that status hierarchy by implying that the mess is the opportunity: complexity is where the breakthroughs - and monopolies - live.

There’s a quiet warning embedded here, too. If biology is the next industrial frontier, then the next generation’s policy fights will be about regulation, ethics, and ownership of life-based technologies. Brown isn’t just predicting the future; he’s staking out the terms under which government should help build it.

Quote Details

TopicScience
More Quotes by George Add to List
Industrial Opportunities from Biological Sciences
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

USA Flag

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

4 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes