
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Marie Curie, born Maria Sklodowska from a poor family in Poland, rose to the pinnacle of scientific fame in the early years of the twentieth century, winning the Nobel Prize twice in the fields of physics and chemistry. At the time, women were simply not accepted in scientific fields. So Curie had to overcome enormous obstacles in order to earn a doctorate at the Sorbonne and perform her pathbreaking research on radioactive materials.
How did she plan her time and navigate her life choices to leave a lasting impact on the world? Harvard Business School professor Robert Simons discusses how Marie Curie rose to scientific fame despite poverty and gender barriers in his case, “Marie Curie: Changing the World.”
By HBR Presents / Brian Kenny4.5
190190 ratings
Marie Curie, born Maria Sklodowska from a poor family in Poland, rose to the pinnacle of scientific fame in the early years of the twentieth century, winning the Nobel Prize twice in the fields of physics and chemistry. At the time, women were simply not accepted in scientific fields. So Curie had to overcome enormous obstacles in order to earn a doctorate at the Sorbonne and perform her pathbreaking research on radioactive materials.
How did she plan her time and navigate her life choices to leave a lasting impact on the world? Harvard Business School professor Robert Simons discusses how Marie Curie rose to scientific fame despite poverty and gender barriers in his case, “Marie Curie: Changing the World.”

378 Listeners

1,457 Listeners

106 Listeners

163 Listeners

1,105 Listeners

3,991 Listeners

1,375 Listeners

745 Listeners

104 Listeners

174 Listeners

40 Listeners

790 Listeners

668 Listeners

218 Listeners

78 Listeners

164 Listeners

82 Listeners