Max Planck — "The world needs men who can think for themselves, and not just repeat what they …"
The world needs men who can think for themselves, and not just repeat what they have been taught.
The world needs men who can think for themselves, and not just repeat what they have been taught.
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"Science advances one funeral at a time."
"Science and religion are not antagonistic; they are complementary."
"The highest goal of all science is to understand the human mind."
"An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul."
"The quantum hypothesis will never be overthrown."
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Society depends on independent thinkers who question, analyze, and form their own conclusions rather than parroting inherited ideas. Simply memorizing and reciting what authorities, textbooks, or teachers say produces compliant minds but not genuine understanding or progress. Real intellectual contribution requires challenging assumptions, testing ideas against evidence, and being willing to reach unpopular conclusions. The world advances through original thought, not through obedient repetition of established doctrine.
Planck lived this principle by overturning classical physics in 1900, proposing that energy comes in discrete quanta despite his own deep reverence for Newtonian tradition. He initially resisted his own revolutionary finding, showing how hard independent thought is even for its practitioners. As a physics professor and later head of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, he mentored generations and defended scientific integrity against Nazi ideology, refusing to parrot politically approved pseudoscience.
Planck worked through Imperial Germany, Weimar collapse, and the Third Reich, when authoritarian regimes demanded intellectual conformity and purged Jewish scientists like his friend Einstein. Newtonian physics was being shattered by quantum mechanics and relativity, forcing scientists to abandon two centuries of certainty. Rote-learning German educational traditions and rising political propaganda made independent thought both harder and more urgent, as regimes increasingly punished dissenters and rewarded those who simply repeated official doctrine.
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