Abstract
Scientists sometimes pretend that what they do is as natural as breathing, and hence they have no philosophies. But Heisenberg, Bohr, Schrodinger, and Einstein all paid attention to theirs, and indeed no scientific discipline in this century has attracted more philosophical comment than quantum physics.172 Should one not therefore make a compendium of these views, the better to shift truth from error?
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References
Professional philosophers prefer, in place of my naive realism, either “critical” or “representational” realism; see the article “Realism” in: The Encylopedia of Philosophy, Paul Edwards, ed.
Corpuscles: see Whittaker (1951), p. 31–32.
Lily E. Kay in J. Hist. Bio. 18:2, (1985), p. 207–246
Delbrück’s article “A physicist’s renewed look at biology: twenty years later,” Science 168 (1970), pp. 1312–1315.
Bohr’s references to psychology: Nature 121, 1928, p. 580–590
Die Naturwissenshaften 17, 1929, p. 483–486; the first reprinted in Wheeler and Zurek.
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© 1995 Birkhäuser Boston
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Wick, D. (1995). Philosophies. In: The Infamous Boundary. Birkhäuser Boston. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-5361-7_17
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-5361-7_17
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