Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science

Science is a profession of inquiry. We ask ourselves what is it we see and why our observations happen the way they do. Answering those two question puts us in the company of those early explorers, who from Europe found the New World, and from Asia reached west to encounter Europe. Vasco Núñez de Ba...

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Main Author: Terry T Turner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2015-01-01
Series:Asian Journal of Andrology
Online Access:http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2015;volume=17;issue=5;spage=704;epage=707;aulast=Turner
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spelling doaj-226f914ba5e64da786b65043eb5e75e82020-11-24T22:47:21ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsAsian Journal of Andrology1008-682X1745-72622015-01-0117570470710.4103/1008-682X.145432Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in scienceTerry T TurnerScience is a profession of inquiry. We ask ourselves what is it we see and why our observations happen the way they do. Answering those two question puts us in the company of those early explorers, who from Europe found the New World, and from Asia reached west to encounter Europe. Vasco Núñez de Balboa of Spain was such an explorer. He was the first European to see or "discover" the Pacific Ocean. One can imagine his amazement, his excitement when he first saw from a mountain top that vast ocean previously unknown to his culture. A career in science sends each of us seeking our own "Balboa Moments," those observations or results that surprise or even amaze us, those discoveries that open our eyes to new views of nature and medicine. Scientists aim to do what those early explorers did: discover what has previously been unknown, see what has previously been unseen, and reveal what has previously been hidden. Science requires the scientist to discover the facts from among many fictions and to separate the important facts from the trivial so that knowledge can be properly developed. It is only with knowledge that old dogmas can be challenged and corrected. Careers in science produce specific sets of knowledge. When pooled with other knowledge sets they eventually contribute to wisdom and it is wisdom, we hope, that will improve the human condition.http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2015;volume=17;issue=5;spage=704;epage=707;aulast=Turner
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Terry T Turner
spellingShingle Terry T Turner
Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
Asian Journal of Andrology
author_facet Terry T Turner
author_sort Terry T Turner
title Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
title_short Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
title_full Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
title_fullStr Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
title_sort exploring the epididymis: a personal perspective on careers in science
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Asian Journal of Andrology
issn 1008-682X
1745-7262
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Science is a profession of inquiry. We ask ourselves what is it we see and why our observations happen the way they do. Answering those two question puts us in the company of those early explorers, who from Europe found the New World, and from Asia reached west to encounter Europe. Vasco Núñez de Balboa of Spain was such an explorer. He was the first European to see or "discover" the Pacific Ocean. One can imagine his amazement, his excitement when he first saw from a mountain top that vast ocean previously unknown to his culture. A career in science sends each of us seeking our own "Balboa Moments," those observations or results that surprise or even amaze us, those discoveries that open our eyes to new views of nature and medicine. Scientists aim to do what those early explorers did: discover what has previously been unknown, see what has previously been unseen, and reveal what has previously been hidden. Science requires the scientist to discover the facts from among many fictions and to separate the important facts from the trivial so that knowledge can be properly developed. It is only with knowledge that old dogmas can be challenged and corrected. Careers in science produce specific sets of knowledge. When pooled with other knowledge sets they eventually contribute to wisdom and it is wisdom, we hope, that will improve the human condition.
url http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2015;volume=17;issue=5;spage=704;epage=707;aulast=Turner
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