Brain Inspired BI 224 Dan Nicholson: Schrödinger’s What is Life? Revisited
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Nov 5, 2025 Dan Nicholson, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at George Mason University, delves into the nuances of Erwin Schrödinger's influential work, What Is Life? Revisited. They explore Schrödinger's motivations and how his physics background shaped his perspective on biology. Nicholson critiques the mechanistic view of cells, arguing genetic determinism misinterprets Schrödinger's ideas. He emphasizes the importance of a pluralistic approach to understanding biology, warning against overreliance on metaphors. Archival discoveries unveil Schrödinger's intent to clarify misconceptions about indeterminacy in biology.
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Schrödinger Shaped Molecular Biology's Vision
- Schrödinger's book shaped half a century of molecular and cell biology, not merely echoed it.
- Dan Nicholson argues the book framed biology around a deterministic, information-centered vision.
Epigraph That Nearly Blocked Publication
- Schrödinger insisted on an epilogue about free will that offended his Irish publisher and delayed publication.
- He refused to remove it and later published with Cambridge instead.
Epilogue Aimed To Block Quantum→Mind Leap
- Schrödinger's epilogue argued the cell's determinacy severs the jump from quantum indeterminacy to free will.
- His agenda was to block physicists' moves from quantum mechanics to psychology.





