Max Planck — "All great discoveries are made by men whose feelings run ahead of their thinking…"
All great discoveries are made by men whose feelings run ahead of their thinking.
All great discoveries are made by men whose feelings run ahead of their thinking.
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"We cannot rest content with an explanation of natural phenomena which does not connect them ultimately with the spiritual."
"The world is not a machine, but a living organism."
"There is no matter as such. All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force."
"The quantum hypothesis will never be understood until one realizes that it is only a provisional stopgap."
"Anybody who has been seriously engaged in scientific work of any kind realizes that over the entrance to the gates of the temple of science are written the words: 'Ye must have faith.'"
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Major breakthroughs in science or any field rarely come from pure logic alone. They emerge when someone has a strong intuition, hunch, or emotional conviction about a truth before they can prove it rationally. Feelings like curiosity, wonder, or unease with existing answers push people toward new ideas, and reasoning only catches up later to verify what intuition already sensed was real.
Planck lived this directly. In 1900, he reluctantly proposed that energy comes in discrete packets to solve the blackbody radiation problem, a step he later called an act of desperation that contradicted his classical physics instincts. His intuition that something was deeply wrong with established theory preceded the mathematical framework, launching quantum mechanics despite his own conservative temperament and initial discomfort with the implications.
Planck worked during the collapse of classical physics (roughly 1890-1930), when Newtonian certainty gave way to relativity and quantum weirdness. Scientists faced phenomena like blackbody radiation, the photoelectric effect, and atomic spectra that Victorian-era physics could not explain. Germany was a world center for theoretical physics, and researchers like Einstein, Bohr, and Heisenberg were making intuitive leaps into counterintuitive territory, remaking reality's foundations through imagination as much as calculation.
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