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Science Quote by Walter Reisch

"There's no term to the work of a scientist"

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Endlessness is the point, and the boast is deliberately double-edged. "There's no term to the work of a scientist" reads like a badge of honor, but it also smuggles in a warning: scientific labor is not a job you clock out of, it is a posture toward reality. Reisch frames the scientist less as a credentialed employee than as a mind in permanent draft mode, always revising, always vulnerable to the next data point that ruins yesterday's certainty.

The phrasing matters. "No term" doesn t just mean no finish line; it hints at no fixed definition, no single era in which the work stays solved. Scientific knowledge is structured to be provisional, and the sentence leans into that institutional humility. It subtly rejects the public appetite for tidy endpoints: the cure, the breakthrough, the definitive study that lets everyone move on. The scientist s day job is to keep the question open, even when funders, headlines, and politics want closure.

Contextually, it lands in a modern landscape where science is both mythologized and mistrusted. We celebrate genius moments, but the actual practice is repetitive, incremental, and often invisible. Reisch insists on the long game: discovery as an ongoing maintenance project, not a single heroic act. The subtext is also personal. If there s no term, there s no retirement from curiosity. That can be thrilling - meaning that scales with time - and it can be exhausting, a life where your best answer is always: not yet.

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No Term to the Work of a Scientist - Walter Reisch
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Walter Reisch (born 1903) is a Scientist from Austria.

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