Yes, everyone greately appreciated his beliefs exepts the upper class people
Sadly, a deceased one.
neils bohr
He got his pilots license only 16. He also aplied to be an astronaut. When he was astronauting ,he put his foot on the moon. He was the first person with enough courage to do that. He also saved his friends Rolly and Met. They weren't ready to astronaut, but with neils help , they landed in the Atlantic ocean
After becoming the first person to walk on the moon, Armsrtong quit NASA and became a professor of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Cincinnatti. Armstrong also sat on several boards including Learjet, Marathon Oil, Thiokol and United Airlines. He was one of the people who investigated the Apollo 13 explosion and the Challenger disaster in 1986. Armstrong also became spokesman for companies like Chrysler for whom he did commercials beginning in 1979. Armstrong turned down several requests from both parties to run for political office.
Einstein said (but in German of course), 'God does not play dice with the universe'. This was a response to the 'Copenhagen School' in relation to Quantum Physics. Werner Heisenberg called this"The Indeterminacy Principle", or sometimes "The Uncertainty Principle". He, along with the majority of quantum physicists - those belonging to the so-called Copenhagen School - concluded that the behaviour of the fundamental constituents of matter is not deterministic but indeterministic. In their view, events at the microphysical level occur "randomly", "by pure chance" - meaning that they aren't determined by any causes whatever. In a letter to Einstein in June 1927, Heisenberg wrote: I believe that indeterminism, that is the nonvalidity of rigorous causality, is necessary, and not just consistently possible. And Neils Bohr expressed the same view when he wrote: The renunciation of the ideal of causality in atomic physics . . . has been forced upon us.' Einstein strongly disagreed believing that Heisenberg et al had wrongly confused two different forms of causality. Einstein referred to dice throwing as this exemplifies the difference between the two. There is a 'causal determinism' as to how the dice land. In other words there are physical laws at work which explain the result but it is impossible for the observer to predict the result so there is no 'predictive determinism' possible. He claimed that the behaviour of micro particles was similar. They obeyed causal laws but we simply did not know enought to predict their behaviour. Even now this argument rumbles on and although the "The Uncertainty Principle" is currently well accepted, this may have more to do with many physicists' world view (that of an atheistic 'uncaused' chance universe) than any hard evidence. The use of 'God' was not just a figure of speech by Einstein. He was a theist. He passionately believed in a powerful (singular) God who had created the universe and its laws. He did not believe in a personal God or in an afterlife as a Christian or follower of Judaism would, but he stated many times consistently through his lfe that he did not consider himself either an atheist or a pantheist. Such claims in some recent books (by those atheists who would wish it to be so) are simply wrong.
There is no N in Bohrs. But his first name was Neils
The electron cloud model was invented throughout the 20th century. (1900's) Yet after neils bohrs model in 1913
Neils Hogenson House was created in 1917.
Steve Neils was born on 1951-05-02.
Neils Red Covered Bridge was created in 1900.
He does gardening and farming.
nothing
Jenifer Neils has written: 'The World of Ceramics' 'Coming of Age in Ancient Greece' 'Worshipping Athena'
Neils Bohr
$70,000
yellow
at Mexico