Erwin Schrodinger — "The most amazing thing about the world is that it is comprehensible."
The most amazing thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.
The most amazing thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.
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"I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination."
"The more precisely the position is determined, the less precisely the momentum is known in this instant, and vice versa."
"The whole of science is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking."
"Consciousness is a singular of which the plural is unknown."
"The world is not made of atoms, it is made of stories."
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 — its laws, patterns, and structure — can be understood by the human mind. This shouldn't be taken for granted: the universe had no obligation to follow logical rules accessible to biological brains. Yet mathematics describes nature with eerie precision. The quote captures genuine intellectual astonishment that order exists, that it's discoverable, and that reason is a reliable guide to physical truth rather than a mere tool of survival.
Schrödinger spent his career making the incomprehensible comprehensible — his 1926 wave equation gave quantum mechanics a tractable mathematical form. Deeply philosophical, influenced by Vedanta and Schopenhauer, he believed mind and nature shared a common substrate. His book What is Life? asked whether biology could reduce to physics. This conviction that reality yields to disciplined inquiry defined his identity: nature is strange but never fundamentally opaque.
The 1920s–1940s saw quantum mechanics overturn classical physics. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, Bohr's Copenhagen interpretation, and apparent quantum randomness alarmed physicists who feared science was losing its grip on reality. World War II further shook confidence in rational progress. Against this backdrop, asserting the world remains comprehensible was a philosophical anchor — a defiance of both quantum mysticism and the era's broader cultural despair about whether reason could illuminate anything at all.
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