@prothero,
prothero;126905 wrote: It is perhaps worth noticing that almost to a man the leading physicists in the quantum revolution of the early twentieth century held mystical and somewhat religious views of ultimate reality (Heisenberg, Schr?dinger, Einstein,De Broglie, Jeans, Planck, Pauli and Eddington). Although they did not believe in the supernatural, human morality version of traditional theism they did not think the universe was the result of blind indifferent and ultimately purposeless forces either. To a man they were struck by the intrinsically rational and mathematically expressible character of the fundamental laws of the universe. They also understood that the mechanistic deterministic materialistic (universe as machine) notion of the universe which arose after Newton was an incomplete and inadequate picture of ultimate and complete reality. Fundamentally religious views were held by some of the greatest of the early and by some of the greatest of the current generation of scientists. Ironically biologists have become some of the most mechanistic and deterministic of modern scientists' not theoretical physicists.
It bis said that if you want to frighten a physicist bring up the locality (state) and and visualization of a fundamental particle, that can in reality only be described in a mathematical formula