Chapter 190 Life and Physics

Erwin Schrödinger was a unique figure in the scientific community of Earth.

If the literary tough guy Hemingway, with his luxury cars, fine wines, and beauties, represented the ideal state for artsy men, then Schrödinger, who conducted research and wrote papers with a drink in hand, was the dream incarnation for science-minded men. The vices that sapped the talent of ordinary people were, for him, the elixirs that sparked brilliance. Night after night of revelry, he remained among the top ten physicists in the world.

His most important theory, aside from the famous Schrödinger Wave Function and Wave Mechanics, was "What is Life? — The Physical Aspect of the Living Cell," a groundbreaking work that brought biology into the realm of physics.