Werner Heisenberg — "The more I think about the physical aspects of the electron, the more it becomes…"
The more I think about the physical aspects of the electron, the more it becomes a puzzle.
The more I think about the physical aspects of the electron, the more it becomes a puzzle.
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"We wouldn't have had the moral courage to recommend to the government in the spring of 1942 that they should employ 120,000 men just for building the thing up."
"I was very much afraid of the consequences of the atom bomb, and I tried to delay its development."
"The problems of atomic physics are not problems of technology, but problems of philosophy."
"There is a fundamental error in separating the parts from the whole, the mistake of atomizing what should not be atomized. Unity and complementarity constitute reality."
"The first gulp from the glass of natural sciences will turn you into an atheist, but at the bottom of the glass God is waiting for you."
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The closer you examine something fundamental, the stranger and less comprehensible it becomes. What looks like a simple object reveals itself as deeply mysterious under scrutiny. Rather than gaining clarity through analysis, you accumulate questions. True understanding isn't a straight path toward certainty; it often leads into genuine perplexity, where the basic building blocks of reality refuse to behave like the familiar objects of everyday experience.
Heisenberg spent his career wrestling with the electron's bizarre behavior, formulating matrix mechanics in 1925 and the uncertainty principle in 1927. He discovered that electrons cannot have simultaneously definite position and momentum, overturning classical intuition. His willingness to admit bewilderment reflects his philosophical bent, influenced by Bohr and Plato, and his honest acknowledgment that quantum reality defies visualization. Puzzlement, for him, was not failure but the doorway to deeper physics.
In the 1920s and 30s, classical physics was collapsing. Rutherford's atom, Bohr's orbits, and experimental anomalies demanded a new framework. Heisenberg worked amid the Copenhagen circle during a revolutionary decade when determinism itself was being dismantled. World War I had shattered European confidence, and physics mirrored that upheaval. Later, under the Nazi regime, Heisenberg led Germany's wartime nuclear program, navigating moral and scientific puzzles that extended far beyond the electron.
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