News from Hope College

Quote, Unquote: Ira Flatow

Acclaimed NPR Science Friday host Ira Flatow has been sharing his enthusiasm for science with the public for more than 40 years, including previously on the Emmy-winning Newton’s Apple on PBS.

On Tuesday, Oct. 15, he addressed a likewise enthusiastic audience at Hope, presenting “Catalysts of Creation” to a crowd of hundreds — students, faculty and staff, retirees, school children and their parents, and other area residents — in the Concert Hall of the Jack H. Miller Center for Musical Arts through the college’s Gentile Interdisciplinary Lectureship in the natural and applied sciences.

Highlighting a mix of inventions and how they originated, Flatow explored commonalities running through the development, success and sometimes obscurity of each, including necessity, timing, inspiration, vision, determination, luck and even failure.

I want to emphasize that you don’t have to be a scientist to be an inventor… Everybody’s got some sort of creativity in them.

His examples also included professional scientists and gifted amateurs alike, which illustrated another central message. “I want to emphasize that you don’t have to be a scientist to be an inventor,” he said. “So the good news is that you don’t have to be this caricature of Einstein to be very creative. Everybody’s got some sort of creativity in them.”

A few of the many inventors and inventions that he discussed:

In the background: Ira Flatow (center) tours campus with Associate Provost Dr. Gerald Griffin of the biology and psychology faculty (left) and Dr. Jonathan Peterson ’84, who is the Lavern ’39 and Betty DePree ’41 Van Kley Professor of Geology and Environmental Science (right).

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