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A Personal Assessment of Schrödinger’s Metaphysics

Gerald R. Baron
16 min readNov 6, 2023

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Photo by Crawford Jolly on Unsplash. For Schrodinger, the end was the end. Was that the way he wanted it?

The final in a series on the metaphysics of Erwin Schrödinger. Here we must ask the difficult question what role his moral and ethical judgment played in his view of reality.

I very much appreciate the surprising number of readers who have patiently journeyed with me through Schrödinger’s metaphysics. Attempting to understand another person’s ideas of reality is essential in evaluating one’s own deeply held beliefs. The result may be adoption of ideas you never anticipated accepting, modifying one’s own, or finding stronger support for existing beliefs.

I can say on reflection this journey has resulted in all three of those possible outcomes for me. I am sharing some of my personal responses to Schrödinger’s metaphysics, in part because of questions posed to me by some readers including those who are aware that I consider myself a more or less traditional Christian. This, then, is how a Christian might respond to Schrödinger’s rich explanation of his personal beliefs.

Vedantic philosophy vs. religion

Vedantism is one of six schools of Hindu philosophy, and is derived from the Upanishads. The word means the “end of the Vedas” or the final teaching of the four Vedic texts. But, there is a great deal of inconsistency and even contradiction in the wide variety of…

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Gerald R. Baron
Gerald R. Baron

Written by Gerald R. Baron

Dawdling at the intersection of faith, science, philosophy and theology. Author of It Was My Turn, a Vietnam story.

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