All our scientific observations of the universe and quanta can only, in the end, be observations of ourselves.
Alan Moore
To remove these one had to account for an “observer” (that is at least for one subject):
(i) Observations are not absolute but relative to an observer’s point of view (i.e., his coordinate system: Einstein);
(ii) Observations affect the observed so as to obliterate the observer’s hope for prediction (i.e., his uncertainty is absolute: Heisenberg).
After this, we are now in the possession of the truism that a description (of the universe) implies one who describes it (observes it).Heinz von Foerster
Of course, we must avoid postulating a new element for each new phenomenon. But an equally serious mistake is to admit into the theory only those elements which can now be observed. For the purpose of a theory is not only to correlate the results of observations that we already know how to make, but also to suggest the need for new kinds of observations and to predict their results. In fact, the better a theory is able to suggest the need for new kinds of observations and to predict their results correctly, the more confidence we have that this theory is likely to be good representation of the actual properties of matter and not simply an empirical system especially chosen in such a way as to correlate a group of already known facts.
David Bohm
Reality is in the observations, not in the electron.
Werner Heisenberg
Bk. II, Observations in the Minset of the Wanderer: Art, Ethics, Nature
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
You wilfully ignore the small, gentle observations in life which you know are the most important.
Douglas Coupland
Moore, Alan
Moore, C. L.
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