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Love Quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science"

About this Quote

Wonder is Emerson's polite way of picking a fight with the cynical, the complacent, and the merely practical. "Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science" compresses his larger argument: progress doesn't begin with equipment, institutions, or even expertise. It begins with a temperament. In the 19th-century world Emerson inhabited, "science" was rapidly professionalizing, hardening into laboratories and credentials. Emerson, the Transcendentalist patron saint of self-reliance, pulls it back to an inner spark: curiosity as an almost moral impulse, a refusal to accept the given as final.

The phrasing matters. "Love" makes wonder feel bodily and voluntary, not dutiful. Science isn't framed as cold reason but as a passion with consequences. Then he calls it a "seed", a metaphor that smuggles in time and cultivation. Seeds don't guarantee harvests; they demand conditions. The subtext is a gentle rebuke to societies that starve curiosity through rote schooling, narrow religion, or status-bound deference. If wonder is the origin, then suppressing wonder is an act of anti-science.

Emerson's gendered "men" is a period tell, but it also hints at his intended audience: the educated male public sphere where knowledge was debated and policed. Read today, the line is less a biological claim than a democratic one. He's insisting that science is not a priesthood; it's what happens when ordinary minds are allowed to ask impolite questions and keep asking them.

Quote Details

TopicScience
Source
Verified source: Society and Solitude: Twelve Chapters (Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1870)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of our science; and such is the mechanical determination of our age, and so recent are our best contrivances, that use has not dulled our joy and pride in them; and we pity our fathers for dying before steam and galvanism, sulphuric ether and ocean telegraphs, photograph and spectroscope arrived, as cheated out of half their human estate. (Chapter: "Works and Days"; page 142 (in the 1870 pagination reproduced by Project Gutenberg)). The commonly-circulated wording "Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science" is a shortened/misquoted form. Emerson’s original published text includes "our science" and continues the sentence. In Project Gutenberg’s transcription of the 1870 book (original publication noted as Fields, Osgood, & Co., 1870), the sentence appears in the essay/chapter "Works and Days" and is marked with the printed-page indicator [142].
Other candidates (1)
The Best Spiritual Writing 2012 (Philip Zaleski, 2011) compilation90.9%
... Ralph Waldo Emerson saw it leading to a different passion—“Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science.” ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. (2026, February 8). Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-love-to-wonder-and-that-is-the-seed-of-science-14192/

Chicago Style
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. "Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-love-to-wonder-and-that-is-the-seed-of-science-14192/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Men love to wonder, and that is the seed of science." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-love-to-wonder-and-that-is-the-seed-of-science-14192/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson (May 25, 1803 - April 27, 1882) was a Philosopher from USA.

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