In this book, Schrödinger attempts to chase the impossible, to explain a phenomenon that has always puzzled philosophers and scientists. What is the mind? How could all these material mechanisms that govern the world come about? Or perhaps he was the one who brought it?
Schrödinger is one of the most famous theoretical physicists and quantum physicists in particular. Schrödinger won the Nobel Prize in 1933 for his achievement of one of the most important equations of quantum theory (the positive Schrödinger equation). Schrödinger viewed extremely small particles such as electrons as waves governed by a wave function, and his equation is an equation Partial differentiation describes the change in the quantum state of a system (its wave function, given that this system is nothing but a wave) with time.
In it, Schrödinger seeks to answer very vital questions as well. He does not claim to have arrived at final, final answers, but rather he explodes the energies of the questions and seeks to present an extremely rich and enjoyable perspective, a perspective that begins with science but aims beyond.
Schrödinger tries to deduce where the mind came from? What is its relationship to matter, the universe, space and time? How was the beginning? Is there an end? Is the mind subject to the laws of the world? Or perhaps he is the one who enforces the law? Is what we live the only absolute truth? Are there other manifestations of the truth?
He discusses these questions armed with the knowledge of scholars, the debate of philosophers, the patience of teachers, and the radiance of Sufis.