Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 13 de may. de 2009 · Scientists and philosophers are using new discoveries in neuroscience to question the idea of free will. They are misguided, says Martin Heisenberg. Examining animal behaviour shows how our ...

  2. At the age of 26 Heisenberg became professor of theoretical physics at the University of Leipzig. Heisenberg, 1926 at Göttingen. He was awarded the Nobel Prize when he was 31 years old. In 1937 he married Elisabeth Schumacher. They had seven children, one of their sons is well known as a neurobiologist and geneticist, Martin Heisenberg.

  3. Martin Heisenberg is the son of Werner Heisenberg, who formulated the uncertainty principle . Heisenberg has found evidence for free will, in the elementary sense of randomness followed by lawful behavior, in fruit flies and even bacteria. This is a two-stage model of free will in the tradition of a small group of scientists and philosophers ...

  4. This page was last edited on 2 April 2024, at 18:55. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  5. Martin Heisenberg (born 7 August 1940) is a German neurobiologist and geneticist. Before his retirement in 2008, he held the professorial chair for genetics and neurobiology at the Bio Centre of the University of Würzburg. Since then, he continues his research with a senior professorship at the Rudolf Virchow Center of the University of Würzburg.Heisenberg studied chemistry and molecular ...

  6. 1 de abr. de 2003 · Martin Heisenberg. Authors. Martin Heisenberg. View author publications. You can also search for this author in PubMed Google Scholar ...