Roger Penrose Quotes

Welcome to a collection of profound insights and musings from one of the most brilliant minds of our time, Sir Roger Penrose. As a renowned physicist, mathematician, and philosopher, Penrose has made significant contributions to our understanding of the universe, particularly in the realms of cosmology, quantum mechanics, and the nature of consciousness. His groundbreaking work has not only expanded the frontiers of human knowledge but has also inspired generations of scientists and thinkers to explore the mysteries of existence with curiosity and rigor.

Throughout his illustrious career, Penrose has delved into some of the most perplexing questions that have puzzled humanity for centuries. From the enigmatic nature of black holes to the tantalizing possibility of a unified theory of physics, his ideas have challenged conventional wisdom and reshaped our perspectives on reality. Beyond his academic achievements, Penrose’s ability to communicate complex concepts with clarity and elegance has earned him widespread acclaim and admiration from both experts and enthusiasts alike.

Below, you will find a selection of Roger Penrose quotes that encapsulate his profound wisdom, keen insights, and unyielding curiosity about the universe and our place within it. Feel free to contemplate these quotes, share them with others, or even use them as inspiration for creative endeavors.

And these little things may not seem like much but after a while they take you off on a direction where you may be a long way off from what other people have been thinking about. Roger Penrose

Well I didn’t actually see the Matrix but I’ve seen other movies where with similar sorts of themes. Roger Penrose

Sometimes it’s the detours which turn out to be the fruitful ideas. Roger Penrose

Some people take the view that we happen by accident. I think that there is something much deeper, of which we have very little inkling at the moment. Roger Penrose

There is a certain sense in which I would say the universe has a purpose. It’s not there by chance. Roger Penrose

Quantum entanglement is a very intriguing issue, but it is not impossible. Roger Penrose

I have certainly enjoyed puzzles since an early age, and things that look like impossible things are often particularly intriguing. Roger Penrose

A computer is a great device because it enables you to do anything which is automatic, anything that you don’t need your understanding for. Understanding is outside a computer. It doesn’t understand. Roger Penrose

As for morality, well that’s all tied up with the question of consciousness. Roger Penrose

Might we… be doing something with our brains that cannot be described in computational terms at all? How do our feelings of conscious awareness – of happiness, pain, love, aesthetic sensibility, will, understanding, etc. – fit into such a computational picture? Roger Penrose

Well, gauge theory is very fundamental to our understanding of physical forces these days. But they are also dependent on a mathematical idea, which has been around for longer than gauge theory has. Roger Penrose

I’m pretty tenacious when it comes to problems. Roger Penrose

I was indeed very slow as a youngster. Roger Penrose

Some years ago, I wrote a book called the Emperor’s New Mind and that book was describing a point of view I had about consciousness and why it was not something that comes about from complicated calculations. Roger Penrose

If the computer-guided robots turn out to be our superiors in every respect, then will they not find that they can run the world better without the need of us at all? Humanity itself will then have become obsolete. Roger Penrose

In the book, I make the point that here we have string theory and here we have twistor theory and we don’t know if either one of them is the right approach to nature. Roger Penrose

If you come from mathematics, as I do, you realize that there are many problems, even classical problems, which cannot be solved by computation alone. Roger Penrose

This book is about physics and its about physics and its relationship with mathematics and how they seem to be intimately related and to what extent can you explore this relationship and trust it. Roger Penrose

A computational device is incapable of developing a mind. We got consciousness not just by being clever. Roger Penrose

I believe there is something going on in a conscious being, which includes many animals, as well as ourselves, that is not a computational activity. And to be conscious at all is not a quality that a computer as such will ever possess – no matter how complicated, no matter how well it plays chess or any of these things. Roger Penrose

My father himself was a human geneticist who was recognized for demonstrating that older mothers tend to get more Down syndrome children, but he had lots of scientific interests. Roger Penrose

But I think it is a serious issue to wonder about the other platonic absolutes of say beauty and morality. Roger Penrose

I used to make polyhedra with my father. There were no clear lines between games and toys for children and his professional work. Roger Penrose

Science and fun cannot be separated. Roger Penrose

If you didn’t have any conscious beings in the world, there really wouldn’t be morality but with consciousness that you have it. Roger Penrose

When I was in Cambridge reading mathematics, I went to Amsterdam for the International Mathematics Congress. There I saw M.C. Escher’s fascinating work. That inspired me to try my hand at drawing such impossibilities. Roger Penrose

My father came from a Quaker family. His father was a professional artist who did portraits – very traditional, a lot of religious subjects. Roger Penrose

As you say, the way string theory requires all these extra dimensions and this comes from certain consistency requirements about how string should behave and so on. Roger Penrose

Ordinary photons do have spin, they have a notion of helicity so they spin around their direction on motion. Roger Penrose

Well, I don’t know if I can comment on Kant or Hegel because I’m no real philosopher in the sense of knowing what these people have said in any detail so let me not comment on that too much. Roger Penrose

My older brother is a distinguished theoretical physicist, a fellow of the Royal Society. Roger Penrose

Some people take the view that the universe is simply there, and it runs along – it’s a bit as though it just sort of computes, and we happen by accident to find ourselves in this thing. I don’t think that’s a very fruitful or helpful way of looking at the universe. Roger Penrose

The image of Stephen Hawking – who has died aged 76 – in his motorised wheelchair, with head contorted slightly to one side and hands crossed over to work the controls, caught the public imagination as a true symbol of the triumph of mind over matter. Roger Penrose

My younger brother ended up the British chess champion 10 times, a record. Roger Penrose

The idea is if you use those two shapes and try to colour the plane with them so the colours match, then the only way that you can do this is to produce a pattern which never repeats itself. Roger Penrose

The basic theory in twistor theory is not to add extra dimensions. Roger Penrose

So what I’m saying is why don’t we think about changing Schrodinger’s equation at some level when masses become too big at the level that you might have to worry about Einstein’s general relativity. Roger Penrose

People think of these eureka moments and my feeling is that they tend to be little things, a little realisation and then a little realisation built on that. Roger Penrose

My own way of thinking is to ponder long and I hope deeply on problems and for a long time which I keep away for years and years and I never really let them go. Roger Penrose

I think I am intrigued by paradoxes. If something seems to be a paradox, it has something deeper, something worth exploring. Roger Penrose

Anton Usov
Anton Usov
I am Anton Usov, an educator with a passion for quotes that resonate with the human experience. Over many years, I have curated a collection that reflects wisdom and emotions across time. Join me in exploring the power of words to inspire and enlighten our paths.
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