Werner Heisenberg — "The very act of observing changes the observed."
The very act of observing changes the observed.
The very act of observing changes the observed.
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.
"One day, when we have learned to understand the elementary particles, we will have understood the whole world."
"I don't believe a word of the whole thing they must have spent the whole of their £500. million in separating isotopes. and then it's possible."
"I would say that I was absolutely convinced of the possibility of our making a uranium engine. but I never thought that we would make a bomb. and at the bottom of my heart. I was really glad that it w…"
"Every word or concept, clear as it may seem to be, has only a limited range of applicability."
"The path to paradise begins in hell."
Simplified articulation of the observer effect
Date: Undated, common paraphrase of his ideas
WisdomFound in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
When you measure or watch something, your measurement itself alters what you're looking at. You can't be a pure, invisible spectator because the tools and methods you use to gather information interact with the subject. This applies literally in physics, where detecting a particle disturbs it, but also metaphorically: studying behavior, monitoring employees, or surveying opinions shifts what people do. Pure objectivity is impossible when observation and reality are entangled.
Heisenberg founded quantum mechanics and formulated the 1927 uncertainty principle, proving you cannot simultaneously know a particle's exact position and momentum. His matrix mechanics work earned him the 1932 Nobel Prize. This quote distills his revolutionary insight that at atomic scales, measurement apparatus inevitably perturbs the system measured. It reflects his philosophical bent, shaped by conversations with Bohr in Copenhagen, and his willingness to overturn classical determinism despite Einstein's famous objections about God not playing dice.
The 1920s saw classical Newtonian physics crumble as experiments revealed bizarre subatomic behavior. Heisenberg worked amid Weimar Germany's intellectual ferment, collaborating in Copenhagen and Gottingen during quantum theory's explosive birth alongside Bohr, Born, Schrodinger, and Pauli. His later career was shadowed by leading Nazi Germany's wartime uranium project, raising enduring debates about whether he deliberately stalled it. The era's upheaval in physics mirrored broader 20th-century losses of certainty across philosophy, art, and politics.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty