Max Planck — "The soul is the seat of all knowledge and all truth."
The soul is the seat of all knowledge and all truth.
The soul is the seat of all knowledge and all truth.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"The human mind is the most complex and mysterious thing in the universe."
"The world needs men who can think for themselves, and not just repeat what they have been taught."
"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…"
"I consider the consciousness as fundamental. I consider matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness. Everything that we talk about, everything that we regard as existin…"
"The ultimate goal of all science is to understand the universe."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Real understanding and truth do not come from outside measurements or logical systems alone, but from an inner, conscious part of us. The statement claims that whatever we genuinely know is ultimately grasped, recognized, and validated within the mind or spirit. Instruments and equations can record data, but only a thinking, aware subject can turn that data into actual knowledge and recognize something as true.
Planck, though founder of quantum theory, was a devout Lutheran who insisted science and religion were compatible and that consciousness was primary, not matter. Late in life he wrote that he regarded consciousness as fundamental and matter as derivative. After losing his son Erwin to the Nazis and watching physics upend classical certainty, he leaned increasingly on inner conviction, believing the deepest truths of nature pointed beyond measurable quantities toward a spiritual reality.
Planck worked through 1900-1947, when his quantum hypothesis shattered Newtonian determinism and Einstein, Bohr, and Heisenberg pushed reality into probability and observer-dependence. Simultaneously Germany endured two world wars, Nazi persecution of physics as 'Jewish,' and collapsing religious authority. Amid this upheaval, many leading physicists publicly debated whether mind, spirit, or pure mathematics underlay nature, and Planck's spiritual statements answered a cultural hunger for meaning as mechanistic certainty crumbled.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty