1. My philosophy of life is work. I want to reveal the mysteries of nature and use this to benefit mankind. I don’t know of any service that could be better than this in our short time on earth. ---Edison (USA) 2. Life is like a road. The nearest shortcut is usually the worst way. --- Bacon (UK) 3. Life means that if we don't have hobbies, we are just like an extremely boring and poorly run theater. --- Stevenson (UK) 4. We have to eat, sleep, browse, and love, that is to say, we have to be exposed to the sweetest things in life, but we must not succumb to these things. --- Curie (France) 5. The ultimate value of life lies in the ability to awaken and think, not just in survival. ---Aristotle (Greece) 6. The struggle for truth is the greatest pleasure in life. ---Bruno (Italy) 7. Life is like an anvil, the more it is struck, the more sparks it can emit. ---Galileo Galilei (Italy) 8. Life is like playing chess. If you make one mistake, you will lose everything. This is a sad thing; and life is worse than playing chess. You cannot play another game or regret it. ---Freud (Austria) 9. What dominates is will at age twenty, wit at age thirty, and judgment at forty. ---Franklin (USA) 10. The biggest shortcoming of mediocre people is that they often feel that they are better than others. ---Franklin (USA) 11. People who mature early will wither early. ---Franklin (USA) 12. The most testing moment for a person is the luckiest moment. ---Wallace (USA) 13. History makes people wise, poetry makes people elegant, mathematics makes people noble, natural philosophy makes people deep, morality makes people steady, and ethics and rhetoric make people good at argument. . --- Bacon (UK) 14. People who have no regrets about burning down a house just to boil eggs for themselves are extreme egoists. --- Bacon (UK) 15. Man is the center of everything and the axis of the world. --- Bacon (UK) 16. Although human nature is hidden, it is difficult to suppress, and rarely can it be completely eradicated. Even if you forcefully suppress it, it will only become more violent after the pressure is removed. Only long-term habits can change a person's natural temperament and character to some extent. --- Bacon (UK) 17. People were created for thinking. ---Pascal (USA) 18. People cannot be isolated, isolation is dangerous. --- Diderot (France) 19. A person's value to society depends first on how much his feelings, thoughts and actions contribute to promoting human interests. ---Einstein (Germany) 20. The fewer our needs, the closer we are to God. ---Socrates (Greece) 21. Praising good things is good, but praising bad things is the behavior of a liar and a treacherous person. ---Democritus (Greece) 22. Human beings are naturally social animals. ---Aristotle (Greece) 23. Serious people imitate the actions of noble people, and frivolous people imitate the actions of despicable people. ---Aristotle (Greece) 24. Bad people obey because of fear, and good people obey because of love. ---Aristotle (Greece) 25. Indulging one's own desires is the greatest disaster; talking about other people's privacy is the greatest sin; not knowing one's own faults is the greatest disease. --- Aristotle (Greece) 26. Man, at his most perfect, is the best of animals, but when he is separated from law and justice, he becomes the worst of animals. … He is the least holy and most barbaric of animals. ---Aristotle (Greece) 27. Conquering yourself requires greater courage, and its victory is also the most glorious victory of all. ---Plato (Greece) 28. No one without reason can accept reason. ---Freud (Austria) 29. People who pursue respect are not worthy of respect. ---Nobel (Sweden) 30. When a person's inner struggle begins, survival becomes valuable. ---Browning (UK)
Marie Curie
The Curies received a Nobel Prize of 70,000 francs, and Mrs. Curie also received 50,000 francs from Osiris. bonus.
She deposited part of the bonus in the bank to subsidize her family and recruit a laboratory assistant at her own expense. She donated some of the remaining bonus to some academic groups, and remitted a travel fee to a poor French teacher who taught her so that the teacher could Revisit my hometown. After pressing the button, she spent half of the remaining money on French government bonds and half on Warsaw bonds. Marie Curie donated the radium (worth more than 1 million francs) she had worked so hard to extract to laboratories researching and treating cancer. Someone advised her to leave these properties to her two daughters. Madame Curie said: "I hope that my daughters will grow up to make a living on their own. I will only leave them spiritual wealth and guide them to the right path of life, but never leave them money." ."