Erwin Schrodinger — "The world is not a machine. It is a living being."
The world is not a machine. It is a living being.
The world is not a machine. It is a living being.
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"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page."
"The best way to escape from the problem is to solve it."
"If you are hungry, you can eat a carrot. If you are thirsty, you can drink water. If you are cold, you can put on a coat. But what do you do if you are lonely?"
"The task is not so much to see what no one has yet seen; but to think what nobody has yet thought, about that which everybody sees."
"If you ask a theoretical physicist today, ‘What is an electron?’ he will probably say, ‘It is a symbol in the wave equation.’ We have got so far from the concrete picture of nature."
Austrian physicist who shared the 1933 Nobel for the wave equation that bears his name and the famous cat thought-experiment. Closely associated with Werner Heisenberg (matrix-mechanics rival who reached the same physics by different math) and Albert Einstein (his pen-pal on quantum interpretation). For an intellectual contrast, see Niels Bohr, Danish physicist and architect of the Copenhagen interpretation — Schrödinger's cat thought-experiment was specifically designed to ridicule Bohr's 'observer-dependent reality' reading of quantum mechanics — Schrödinger thought the Copenhagen interpretation was absurd; the cat was meant as reductio ad absurdum.
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Reality isn't a cold, deterministic clockwork system where everything follows fixed mechanical rules. Life, consciousness, and the universe have qualities that machines simply don't possess — unpredictability, organic complexity, self-organization, and something irreducible that pure mechanics cannot capture. The world behaves more like an organism than an engine, with interconnected processes that resist reduction to mere gears and levers.
Schrödinger spent his career revealing quantum mechanics' irreducibly probabilistic nature, undermining classical determinism. His 1944 book 'What Is Life?' pioneered biophysics, arguing living systems operate by quantum-level aperiodic crystal structures — genetics before DNA was understood. He rejected purely mechanistic biology, championing consciousness and organism as central to physics, notably through his unified field interests and Vedantic philosophical writings.
Mid-20th century physics had just shattered the Newtonian mechanical worldview through relativity and quantum theory. Simultaneously, cybernetics and early computing were tempting thinkers to model everything as information-processing machines. Schrödinger's era confronted industrialized warfare and dehumanizing mechanization, making the insistence that life transcends mechanism both scientifically urgent and deeply humanistic resistance against reductionism.
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