After introducing the empiricist point of view in philosophy of science, and the concepts and methods of the semantic approach to scientific theories, Professor van Fraassen discusses quantum theory in three stages. He first examines the question of whether and how empirical phenomena require a non-classical theory, and what sort of theory they require. He then discusses the mathematical foundations of quantum theory with special reference to developments in the modelling of interaction, composite systems, and measurement. Finally, the author broaches the main questions of interpretation. After offering a critique of earlier interpretations, he develops a new one - the modal interpretation - which attempts to stay close to the original Copenhagen ideas without implying a radical incompleteness in quantum theory. He gives special attention to the character of composite, many-body systems and especially to the peculiar character of assemblies of identical particles in quantum statistics.
| ISBN | 019824861X | | DEWEY edition | DC22 | | ISBN13 | 9780198248613 (What's this?) | | Pages | 558 | | Publisher | Oxford University Press | | Weight (grammes) | 812 | | Imprint | Clarendon Press | | Published in | Oxford | | Format | Hardback | | Height (mm) | 216 | | Publication date | 26 Sep 1991 | | Width (mm) | 138 | | Non-book description | xvi541 | | Spine width (mm) | 37 | | Library of Congress | QC174.12.V | | Academic level | Undergraduate | | DEWEY | 530.12 | |
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Part 1 Determinism and inderterminism in classical perspective: determinism; indeterminism and probability. Part 2 How the phenomena demand quantum theory: the empirical basis of quantum theory; new probability models and their logic. Part 3 Mathematical foundations: the basic theory of quantum mechanics; composite systems, interaction, and measurement. Part 4 Questions of interpretation: critique of the standard interpretation; modal interpretation of quantum mechanics; EPR - when is a correlation not a mystery?; the problem of identical particles; indentical particles - individuation and modality.
"Van Fraassen introduces each topic with care and attention to detail....A thought-provoking and largely well-written monograph...complemented by an extensive bibliography containing important contributions by numerous authors." --Contemporary Physics "I strongly recommend the book to anyone who aims at a thorough background in this bewildering subject."--The Philosophical Review

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