Abstract
In these brief opening remarks I should like to convey my principal reason for convening this meeting. We read often that in 1927 the formalism and interpretation of nonrelativistic quantum mechanics was firmly settled and etched in stone under the rubric Copenhagen Interpretation. Most physicists relegate the ensuing Bohr-Einstein debates to heroic tales about the distant past of our culture. Yet sixty-two years after publication of Werner Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle paper there is a not so small group of scholars who rightly consider that certain fundamental issues of quantum mechanics remain unsettled.
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References
Bell, J., 1987, Collected Papers on Quantum Philosophy: Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Heisenberg, W., 1926, Die Quantenmechanik, Die Naturwissenschaften, 14, 899.
Shimony, A., 1989, Search for a World View which can Accommodate our Knowledge of Microphysics, in Philosophical Consequences of Quantum Theory: Reflections on Bell’s Theorerm J.T. Cushing and E. McMullin eds., Notre Dame Press, South Bend IN.
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© 1990 Plenum Press, New York
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Miller, A.I. (1990). Opening Remarks. In: Miller, A.I. (eds) Sixty-Two Years of Uncertainty. NATO ASI Series, vol 226. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-8771-8_1
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