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Overview"This text provides a comprehensive account of Erwin Schrodinger's successive interpretations of quantum mechanics, culminating in their final synthesis in the 1950s. It should be of interest to scientists, historians and philosophers who are involved in the foundational problems of modern physics. The book shows that the widespread view, according to which Schrodinger was ""conservative"" in his approach to quantum mechanics, is ill-founded. A rational reconstruction of Schrodinger's innovative interpretation of the quantum theory in the 1950's is undertaken. His apparently conflicting attitudes towards realism (which combine Mach's positivism and realism of theoretical entities) are reconciled in the framework of S. Blackburn's ""quasi-realism"". Schrodinger's rejection of corpuscles, and his adoption of wave-like entities instead, is shown to be a by-product of his phenomenalist conceptions of material bodies and of his quasi-realist attitude towards theoretical entities. In addition, his views on the measurement problem are compared with current no-collapse interpretations (especially Everett's and Van Fraassen's). Finally, Schrodinger's and Bohr's positions are systematically contrasted. The difference between Bohr's combination of holistic and dualistic analysis of the measurement process (contextual phenomena combined with classical-quantum cut), and Schrodinger's parallelist conception (experimental events - wave function evolution) is emphasized." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael BitbolPublisher: Springer Imprint: Springer Edition: 1996 ed. Volume: 188 Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 1.310kg ISBN: 9780792342663ISBN 10: 0792342666 Pages: 292 Publication Date: 31 October 1996 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1: The Controversy between Schrödinger and the Göttingen-Copenhagen Physicists in the 1950’s.- 1–1 Schrödinger’s successive interpretations of quantum mechanics according to the current views.- 1–2 Born’s and Heisenberg’s criticism of Schrödinger’s late interpretation of quantum mechanics.- 1–3 Historical flaws in the Born-Heisenberg critique of Schrödinger’s late interpretation of quantum mechanics.- 1–4 Misunderstandings about the concept of particle.- 1–5 Misunderstandings about the concept of “reality”.- 1–6 Misunderstandings about “causality”.- 1–7 Schrödinger’s over-revolutionary attitude.- 1–8 Modernity and post-modernity.- 1–9 The continuity of Schrödinger’s attitude towards quantum mechanics (an outline).- 2: Schrödinger’s Theoretical Project.- 2–1 Reality and virtuality (1924).- 2–2 Holism and wave-packets (1925).- 2–3 Holism and the three dimensions of space (1926).- 2–4 Wave interpretation versus electrodynamic interpretation: a prehistory of the empirical correspondence rules.- 2–5 The lack of pictures.- 2–6 The lack of continuity.- 3: The Analytical Stance.- 3–1 The ontological significance of the uncertainty relations.- 3–2 The state vector as a catalog of informations.- 4: Towards a New Ontology.- 4–1 The fading of the concept of particle.- 4–2 An ontology of state vectors.- 4–3 The “blind spot” of quantum mechanics.- 4–4 Neo-Schrödingerian views on the measurement problem. I-Everett’s interpretation.- 4–5 Neo-Schrödingerian views on the measurement problem II-Modal and critical interpretations.- 5: The “Thing” of Everyday Life.- 5–1 The three features of objects.- 5–2 The aspects and the “thing”.- 5–3 The “elements” of the construction (Mach, Russell,Schrödinger, Husserl).- 5–4 Are the “basic data” really basic?.- 5–5 The construction of objects and the unconscious.- 5–6 The “thing” and the future.- 5–7 Possibilities and infinities.- 5–8 The “thing” as theory, and the theory as expectation.- 5–9 Realism and morals.- 5–10 Form and individuality.- 5–11 Wholeness and individuality.- 6: Complemetarity, Representation and Facts.- 6–1 Schrödinger’s criticism of Bohr’s complementarity.- 6–2 Bohr’s complementarities.- 6–3 Schrödinger’s “complementarities”.- 6–4 Two parallelisms.- 6–5 Being-in-a-body and being-in-the-world.- 6–6 The body, the world, and dualism.- 6–7 The body, the world, and monism.- 6–8 The body, the world, and anomalous parallelism.- Conclusion.ReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |