Max Planck — "The creative scientist has to be a man of faith. He must have faith in his resul…"
The creative scientist has to be a man of faith. He must have faith in his results, and in the laws of nature.
The creative scientist has to be a man of faith. He must have faith in his results, and in the laws of nature.
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"The universe is not only stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine."
"The history of science shows that the human mind is capable of understanding the most complex phenomena."
"When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change."
"The human mind is the most complex and mysterious thing in the universe."
"An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul. What does happen is that its opponents gradual…"
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Scientific discovery requires more than cold logic. A researcher pursuing new ideas has no guarantee their work will succeed, so they must trust their intuition, trust that their experimental results point to something real, and trust that the universe operates by consistent, knowable rules. Without this underlying conviction, a scientist would abandon difficult problems before breakthroughs emerge, since evidence rarely arrives complete or immediately convincing.
Planck spent six years defending his quantum hypothesis before physicists accepted it, and he initially doubted his own radical 1900 energy-quanta proposal. A devout Lutheran who served as a church elder, he openly reconciled science and religion, arguing both required belief in an ordered reality. His perseverance through personal tragedy, including losing sons in both World Wars, mirrored the scientific faith he describes here.
Planck worked as classical physics collapsed between 1900 and 1930, when quantum mechanics and relativity overturned centuries of Newtonian certainty. Scientists faced genuinely counterintuitive results, probability replacing determinism, and fierce philosophical debates with Einstein, Bohr, and Heisenberg. Amid rising secularism, Weimar intellectual upheaval, and later Nazi ideological interference in German science, Planck publicly defended both rigorous empiricism and spiritual conviction as compatible foundations for pursuing truth.
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