
He was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1887 and died in 1961. He worked at universities in several countries during his career.
Yes. In 1944 he wrote 'What Is Life?', a popular book that explained ideas about genes and life in clear language and inspired later biologists.
No — he was mainly a theoretical physicist who used mathematics and ideas to explain nature. Experimental scientists test these ideas in labs; his theories guided many such experiments.