The New Physics by Fritjof Capra
Fritjof Capra, an Austrian-American physicist and deep
environmentalist who was born in Austria in 1939, and wrote the essay "The
New Physics," is the author of numerous publications including the Tao of
Physics, unusual wisdom, etc. He was raised in Vienna, the nation's capital,
and graduated from the University of Vienna. When several groundbreaking new
ideas about the nature of matter were introduced in 1900, the subject of
physics was split into classical and contemporary physics.
Albert Einstein had a significant contribution to the
development of contemporary physics by altering the old ideas of space and time
and weakening a cornerstone of the Newtonian cosmic arena. The new physics appears
to be related to the Eastern pondering of mysticism, which is characterized by
words like organic, holistic, and ecological entity in contrast to the
mechanistic global idea. The entire universe must be pictured as one indivisible,
dynamic whole, whose parts are essentially interrelated into the original
whole, rather than as a mechanistic entity made of a multitude of objects. In
this way, mystical and philosophical worldviews are more in line with the new
physics.