Erwin Schrodinger — "The world is a journey, and we are the travelers."
The world is a journey, and we are the travelers.
The world is a journey, and we are the travelers.
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"The world is not a collection of independent objects, but a single, indivisible whole."
"If a man never contradicts himself, the reason must be that he virtually never says anything at all."
"The great difficulty for our contemporary way of thinking is that we must recognize the identity of the experiencing and the experienced subject."
"What we observe as material bodies and forces are nothing but shapes and variations in the structure of space. Particles are just schaumkommen (appearances)!"
"If we were to pursue the idea to its logical conclusion, we would have to assume that every thought, every feeling, every sensation is somehow connected with an elementary process in the brain, with a…"
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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Life is not a fixed destination but an ongoing process of movement and discovery. We are not passive observers but active participants shaping our own paths. The journey itself — with its uncertainties, detours, and revelations — constitutes the substance of existence, not any final arrival point.
Schrödinger spent his life literally traveling between institutions — Vienna, Zürich, Berlin, Dublin — driven by scientific curiosity and political exile. His wave mechanics recast particles not as fixed objects but as propagating probability waves, making journey and motion the fundamental reality of nature rather than static positions.
Schrödinger worked through two World Wars, the collapse of empires, and the quantum revolution of the 1920s-30s. Physics itself was 'traveling' — abandoning classical certainties for probabilistic frameworks. Einstein's relativity had already dissolved fixed reference frames, making the metaphor of universal journeying scientifically resonant across European intellectual culture.
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