Oxford Handbook of the History of Quantum Interpretations

Oxford Handbook of the History of Quantum Interpretations

Joas, Christian; Hartz, Thiago; Bacciagaluppi, Guido; Darrigol, Olivier; Kojevnikov, Alexei; Pessoa Jr, Osvaldo; Freire Jr, Olival

Oxford University Press

03/2022

1312

Dura

Inglês

9780198844495

15 a 20 dias

2076

Olival Freire Jr, Guido Bacciagaluppi, Olivier Darrigol, Thiago Hartz, Christian Joas, Alexei Kojevnikov, and Osvaldo Pessoa Jr.: Introduction
Part I - Quantum physics: scientific and philosophical issues under debate
1: Franck Laloe: Quantum mechanics is routinely used in laboratories with great success, but no consensus on its interpretation has emerged
2: Wayne Myrvold: Philosophical issues raised by quantum theory and its interpretations
Part II - Historical landmarks of the interpretations and foundations of quantum physics
3: Anthony Duncan and Michel Janssen: Quantization conditions, 1900-1925
4: Massimiliano Badino: Of weighting and counting: statistics and ontology in the old quantum theory
5: Helge Kragh: Dead as a doornail? Zero-point energy and Low-temperature physics in early quantum theory
6: Martin Jaehnert and Christoph Lehner: The early debates about the interpretation of quantum mechanics
7: Christian Joas: Foundations and applications: the creative tension in the early development of quantum mechanics
8: Guido Bacciagaluppi: The statistical interpretation: Born, Heisenberg and von Neumann, 1926-27
9: Klaus Hentschel: A perennially grinning Cheshire cat? Over a century of experiments on light quanta and their perplexing interpretations
10: Daniela Monaldi: The evolving understanding of quantum statistics
11: Osvaldo Pessoa Jr.: The measurement problem
12: Michel Paty: Einstein's criticisms of quantum mechanics
13: David Kaiser: Tackling loopholes in experimental tests of Bell's inequality
14: Thiago Hartz: The measuring process in quantum field theory
15: Alexander Blum and Bernadette Lessel: The interpretation debate and quantum gravity
16: Alexei Grinbaum: Quantum information and the quest for reconstruction of quantum theory
17: Olivier Darrigol: Natural reconstructions of quantum mechanics
18: Klaas Landsman: The axiomatization of quantum theory through functional analysis: Hilbert, von Neumann, and beyond
19: Fabio Freitas: Tony Leggett's challenge to quantum mechanics and its path to decoherence
Part III - Places and contexts relevant for the interpretations of quantum theory
20: Don Howard: The Copenhagen interpretation
21: Anja Skaar Jacobsen: Copenhagen and Niels Bohr
22: Elise Crull: Grete Hermann's Interpretation of quantum mechanics
23: Climerio Paulo da Silva Neto: Instrumentation and the foundations of quantum mechanics
24: Jose G. Perillan: Early Solvay councils: rhetorical lenses for quantum convergence and divergence
25: Flavio Del Santo: The foundations of quantum mechanics in post-war Italy's cultural context
26: Jean-Philippe Martinez: Foundations of quantum physics in the Soviet Union
27: Kenji Ito: Early Japanese reactions to the interpretation of quantum mechanics, 1927-1943
28: Josep Simon: Form and meaning: textbooks, pedagogy, and the canonical genres of quantum mechanics
29: Indianara Silva: Chien-Shiung Wu's contributions to experimental philosophy
30: Sebastian Murgueitio Ramirez: On how Epistemological Letters changed the foundations of quantum mechanics
31: Thomas Ryckman: Quantum interpretations and 20th century philosophy of science
Part IV - Historical and philosophical theses
32: Stefano Osnaghi: Bohr and the epistemological lesson of quantum mechanics
33: Olival Freire Jr: Making sense of the century-old scientific controversy over the quanta
34: Kristian Camilleri: Orthodoxy and heterodoxy in the postwar era
35: Paul Forman: The reception of the Forman thesis in modernity and postmodernity
36: Alexei Kojevnikov: Quantum historiography and cultural history: revisiting the Forman thesis
37: Richard Staley: The co-creation of classical and modern physics and the foundations of quantum mechanics
38: Giora Hon and Bernard R. Goldstein: Interpretation in electrodynamics, atomic theory, and quantum mechanics
Part V - The proliferation of interpretations
39: Jeffrey Bub: Hidden variables
40: Jeffrey Barrett: Pure wave mechanics, relative states, and many worlds
41: Herve Zwirn: Is QBism a possible solution to the conceptual problems of quantum mechanics?
42: Karen Barad: Agential realism: a relation ontology interpretation
43: Carlo Rovelli: Relational interpretation
44: Jean-Jacques Szczeciniarz and Joseph Kouneiher: Philosophy of wholeness and the general and new concept of order: Bohm's and Penrose's points of view
45: Valia Allori: Spontaneous localization theories
46: Decio Krause, Jonas Arenhart, and Otavio Bueno: The non-individuals interpretation of quantum mechanics
47: Dennis Dieks: Modal interpretations of quantum mechanics
48: Gustavo Rocha, Dean Rickles, and Florian Boge: A brief historical perspective on the consistent histories interpretation of quantum mechanics
49: Jean Bricmont: Einstein, Bohm and Bell: a comedy of errors
50: Alexander Pechenkin: The statistical (ensemble) interpretation of quantum mechanics
51: Emilio Santos: Stochastic interpretations of quantum mechanics
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