These advancements dismantled earlier deterministic views, like those of the Marquis de Laplace, who believed that perfect knowledge of the universe's state could predict everything.
Werner Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, which revealed the impossibility of precisely measuring a particle’s position and velocity simultaneously, further established the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics.
Scientists then discovered particles like electrons, protons, and neutrons, and Murray Gell-Mann’s 1969 Nobel-winning work identified quarks as their constituents.
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Full Summary of a Brief History Of Time by Stephen Hawking
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