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Original Research Papers

Does Quantum Theory Redefine Realism? The Neo-Copenhagen View

Pages 137-163 | Published online: 30 Apr 2015
 

Abstract

Foundational attitudes towards quantum theory have recently thrown off much of the old philosophical baggage largely associated with Niels Bohr to which Einstein famously objected, including the central ‘collapse of the wavefunction’ concept. A ‘neo-Copenhagen’ interpretation, it is suggested, has arisen. This development is placed in its historical context and contrasted to philosophical allegations of anti-realism. The neo-Copenhagen interpretation remains wedded to Heisenberg's uncertainty and observer-dependent values of particles. However a discussion of Nick Herbert's ‘rainbow analogy’ suggests that subatomic particles are emergent from a ‘nonlocal’ level of reality outside the domain of space and time. Critical realism recognizes that emergent systems have an irreducibly ontologically character, and in its combination of epistemological relativism and ontological realism, provides a basis for the proposition that realists who support Einstein's objections must now recognize that their realism must be redefined.

Notes

  7 CitationEinstein et al. 1935, 777, original emphasis.

 24 Cited in CitationNeffe 2007, 331.

 25 Cited in CitationNeffe 2007, 330.

 26 Even as the ‘modern form of dialectics’, CitationJacobsen 2007, 12.

 31 CitationHerbert 1987, 17, original emphasis.

 34 Cf. Tong Citation2011.

 38 Cf. Aczel Citation2003; Gribbin Citation1984, 222–23; Bell Citation2008.

 44 CitationBhaskar 1993, 78: ‘It is a (deep but) contingent fact that the world reveals ontological stratification — of many layers of depth, in many different dimensions.’

 49 CitationHegel 1998, 368, original emphasis.

 59 CitationNorris 2000, 1. There is no definitive definition of the Copenhagen interpretation. Origin cf. CitationHeisenberg 2000, 14–25. and Gribbin Citation[1984] 1996, 173.

 60 CitationHerbert 1987, 147 (but note that terminology changes over time).

 68 Schlosshauer et al. Citation2013. Thanks to Anindya Bhattacharya for pointing this survey out to me.

 74 Castelvecchi Citation2010.

 75 Castelvecchi 2010, 10.

 76 CitationCox and Forshaw 2011, 28, original emphasis.

 92 Cox and Forshaw 2011, 189.

 93 Wallace 2010, 67; original emphasis.

 95 Vedral Citation2011.

 96 Cox Citation2014.

103 CitationHerbert 1987, 245, original emphasis.

105 Cf. CitationBell 2008, 14–21; Aczel Citation2003; Gribbin Citation1984, 222–4.

106 Aczel Citation2003 gives a very good account.

120 CitationBohm 1971, 87 and elsewhere.

123 CitationNorris 2000, 5, original emphasis.

130 Keynes Citation1942; Newton 2003, 1159.

133 E.g. Engels Citation1968, 597 and elsewhere.

134 It was Galileo who first discovered that space was relative.

143 NASA press release: “WMAP Produces New Results,” http://magsfc.nasa.gov/news, accessed 8 April 2013.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Peter Stuart Mason

Peter Stuart Mason works for the Socialist Party. He writes occasionally for The Socialist newspaper and Socialism Today on science and the environment and is author of the short polemic, Science, Marxism and the Big Bang (Socialist Publications, 2012).

Correspondence to: Pete Mason, Socialist Party, PO Box 24697, London E11 1YD, UK. Email: [email protected]

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