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Léon Brillouin

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Léon Brillouin

Léon Nicolas Brillouin (August 7, 1889October 4, 1969) was a French physicist. He made contributions to quantum mechanics, radio wave propagation in the atmosphere, solid state physics, and information theory.

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  • We completely ignore the human value of the information. A selection of 100 letters is given a certain information value, and we do not investigate whether it makes sense in English, and, if so, whether the meaning of the sentence is of any practical importance. According to our definition, a set of 100 letters selected at random (according to the rules of Table 1.1), a sentence of 100 letters from a newspaper, a piece of Shakespeare or a theorem of Einstein are given exactly the same informational value.
    • Léon Brillouin (1962). Science and Information Theory, second edition. Academic Press, New York. p. 9. ISBN 0-48643-918-6. 
  • With Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, the fundamental role of experimental errors became a basic feature of physics.
    • Léon Brillouin (1962). Science and Information Theory, second edition. Academic Press, New York. p. 304. ISBN 0-48643-918-6. 
  • Both the uncertainty principle and the negentropy principle of information make Laplace's scheme [of exact determinism] completely unrealistic. The problem is an artificial one; it belongs to imaginative poetry, not to experimental science.
    • Léon Brillouin (1962). Science and Information Theory, second edition. Academic Press, New York. p. 308. ISBN 0-48643-918-6. 
  • The laws of classical mechanics represent a mathematical idealization and should not be assumed to correspond to the real laws of nature. … We now have to realize that errors are inevitable (..) a discovery that makes strict determinism impossible.
    • Léon Brillouin (1962). Science and Information Theory, second edition. Academic Press, New York. p. 314. ISBN 0-48643-918-6. 
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