Stephen Hawking — "The universe is a vast and empty place, but it's full of potential."
The universe is a vast and empty place, but it's full of potential.
The universe is a vast and empty place, but it's full of potential.
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"I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken-down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark."
"I have often been asked: What do you think about God? I have said that we cannot know for sure whether God exists or not. But I don't believe in a personal God."
"Wrong again, Albert."
"We are all connected to the universe, and the universe is connected to us."
"The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge."
British theoretical physicist whose Hawking radiation work and A Brief History of Time (1988) brought black-hole physics to a mass audience while he lived with ALS for 55 years. Closely associated with Roger Penrose (his collaborator on singularity theorems) and Carl Sagan (fellow popularizer who wrote Brief History's foreword). For an intellectual contrast, see William Lane Craig, American philosopher of religion — Craig's Kalam cosmological argument depends on the Big Bang requiring a divine first cause; Hawking's no-boundary proposal was specifically designed to remove the moment that would require one — the cleanest cosmology-vs-natural-theology contrast in modern thought.
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Space is overwhelmingly empty—99.9999% vacuum, atoms separated by vast distances—yet from that near-nothingness emerge stars, galaxies, life, and physics itself. The quote reframes emptiness not as absence but as latent structure: quantum fields, dark energy, and physical laws that make everything possible. Modern cosmology confirms the insight—the vacuum isn't nothing; it vibrates with potential energy that drives the universe's expansion and complexity.
Hawking's defining work centered on black holes—the universe's most extreme voids—where he discovered they emit radiation and carry entropy, proving emptiness has thermodynamic content. Diagnosed with ALS at 21 and given two years to live, he worked 55 more years producing foundational cosmological theory. His life embodied the quote's paradox: a body progressively emptied of movement generated ideas that reshaped our understanding of existence.
Hawking worked during cosmology's golden era (1960s–2018). The Big Bang was confirmed via cosmic microwave background detection in 1964, and the Space Race made cosmic emptiness feel navigable. Cold War anxieties about nuclear annihilation shadowed discussions of cosmic scale. His 1988 book A Brief History of Time sold 10 million copies as public fascination with the universe's origins peaked. Gravitational wave detection in 2015 then validated decades of theoretical spacetime work.
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