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Daily Inspiration Quote by George Bernard Shaw

"Science never solves a problem without creating ten more"

About this Quote

Shaw’s line lands like a shrug with a knife in it: the modern faith in science as tidy progress is, to him, a comforting fairy tale. “Never” is doing a lot of work. It’s not a measured claim about research outcomes; it’s a dramatist’s absolutism, designed to puncture the Victorian-Edwardian confidence that every new discovery is a moral upgrade. Shaw treats “problem” as a stage prop. You think you’re watching one plot resolve; the curtain falls and suddenly there are ten new acts.

The subtext is less anti-science than anti-complacency. Shaw’s real target is the public appetite for solutions without consequences, the political temptation to outsource judgment to “experts,” and the bourgeois habit of calling any new capability “improvement.” The joke is that science is both miracle-worker and mischief-maker, and society wants only the miracle. The “ten more” isn’t arithmetic; it’s a ratio of unintended effects: antibiotics give you resistant bacteria, industrialization gives you pollution, faster communication gives you faster misinformation. Progress is a Hydra.

Context matters: Shaw wrote in an era intoxicated by engineering, medicine, and imperial logistics, when “scientific” was becoming a synonym for “inevitable.” As a playwright, he’s also defending conflict itself. Drama requires complications; so does history. The line works because it turns a triumphalist narrative into a punchline, insisting that knowledge expands the perimeter of what can go wrong. Science, in Shaw’s telling, doesn’t end arguments. It multiplies them.

Quote Details

TopicScience
Source
Verified source: Shaw's Speech at the Einstein Dinner (Savoy Hotel) (George Bernard Shaw, 1930)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Science is always wrong; … Science can never solve one problem without creating ten more problems.. The frequently-circulated quote 'Science never solves a problem without creating ten more' appears to be a shortened/altered paraphrase. A primary-source context is attributed to George Bernard Shaw's toast/speech at the Einstein Dinner at the Savoy Hotel, London, dated 28 Oct 1930. The wording most consistently tied to that event is the longer form above (often also given as '...without raising ten more problems.'). Many secondary references point to a later printed re-publication of the speech text in 'The Religious Speeches of George Bernard Shaw' (ed. Warren Sylvester Smith, 1963) p. 83, but that 1963 volume is not the first publication; it is a reprint. I did not retrieve a scan of the original 1930 printed transcript or contemporary newspaper text within this search session, so I cannot confirm the first publication venue/page from a contemporaneous 1930 primary document here.
FeaturedThis quote was our Quote of the Day on February 18, 2025
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Shaw, George Bernard. (2026, February 7). Science never solves a problem without creating ten more. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/science-never-solves-a-problem-without-creating-33215/

Chicago Style
Shaw, George Bernard. "Science never solves a problem without creating ten more." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/science-never-solves-a-problem-without-creating-33215/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Science never solves a problem without creating ten more." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/science-never-solves-a-problem-without-creating-33215/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw (July 26, 1856 - November 2, 1950) was a Dramatist from Ireland.

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