Max Planck — "The scientist must be a dreamer and a realist at the same time."
The scientist must be a dreamer and a realist at the same time.
The scientist must be a dreamer and a realist at the same time.
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"When you change your opinion, you are not a weakling. You are a scientist."
"The highest court is in the end one's own conscience and conviction—that goes for you and for Einstein and every other physicist—and before any science there is first of all belief. For me, it is beli…"
"The world is not a machine, but a living organism."
"The highest aim of physics is to find the one all-embracing law which governs all natural phenomena."
"I am convinced that the world is governed by laws of a mathematical nature."
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Doing science well requires two mindsets that seem opposite. You need imagination to picture possibilities that don't yet exist, to guess at hidden rules, and to see beyond what current evidence shows. But you also need discipline to test those guesses against stubborn facts, accept inconvenient results, and discard beautiful ideas that don't match reality. Neither alone is enough; pure dreaming drifts into fantasy, pure realism never reaches new ground.
Planck embodied this duality. As a realist, he was a rigorously trained thermodynamicist who resisted speculation and initially distrusted his own quantum hypothesis of 1900, calling it an 'act of desperation' to fit blackbody data. Yet as a dreamer, he proposed that energy came in discrete packets, a radical break from classical continuity that overturned physics. He spent years trying to reconcile the leap with older theory, holding both imagination and empirical discipline in tension.
Planck worked at the turn of the twentieth century, when classical physics seemed nearly complete yet was breaking down on problems like blackbody radiation and the photoelectric effect. German universities prized rigorous experiment and mathematical formalism, while a younger generation including Einstein and Bohr pushed toward stranger interpretations. Two world wars, the rise and fall of Nazism, and the birth of quantum mechanics and relativity all unfolded during his career, demanding both visionary theorizing and grounded experimental verification.
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