Michael

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Quantum physics and other theoretical developments overturned the cumulative result of a millennium-old tradition by claiming that the very matter of the universe was unlike anything Newton had imagined, and that at its heart lay states of radical uncertainty in which particles could be two different things, had no fixed identity, had contradictory characteristics, and were governed not by laws but by simple chance. The new physics argued that there are no absolute laws in nature, only statistical probabilities.
Fracture: Life and Culture in the West, 1918-1938
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