


The Curiosity Journal
Albert Einstein
"The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existence."
Einstein said this near the end of his life — not about physics, but about the disposition that made physics possible. Curiosity doesn't report to outcomes. It doesn't need permission from results. The questioning is the reason.
Some questions deserve more than a margin note. This journal is where you follow them.
About This Journal
- Cover: hardcover — durable, easy to clean, substantial in hand
- Size: 5.5" × 8.5" — the right scale for real thinking
- 80 pages of lined, cream-colored paper
- Elastic closure and ribbon page marker included
- Expandable inner pocket for loose notes, receipts, anything worth keeping
Who It's For
The person who keeps asking after everyone else has moved on. The one whose notebook margins are already full. Someone who understands that the question behind the obvious answer is usually the more interesting place to be.
Don't stop questioning.
If you want the same quote on a tee, it lives on the Curiosity Tee.
Albert Einstein, in Plain English
- Lived: 1879–1955, born in Germany, later American citizen
- Developed the theory of special and general relativity — foundational to modern physics
- Won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1921
- Spent his career following questions others considered settled or unanswerable
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