An Investigation of the Metaphysical and Logical Implications of Quantum Physics
Jan Philipp Dapprich, Annika Schuster

#Quantum
#Physics
#Philosophy
#ontological
The book investigates the ontology and logic of quantum physics. The first part discusses the relationship of theory and observation and different views on the ontological status of scientific theories. It introduces the fundamentals of quantum mechanics and some of its interpretations and their compatibility with various ontological positions. In the second part, implications of quantum mechanics on classical logic, especially on the distributive law and bivalence, as discussed by Garrett Birkhoff & John von Neumann (1936) and Hilary Putnam (1968), and their counterarguments are reconstructed and discussed. It is concluded that classical logic is sufficient for dealing with quantum mechanical propositions.
Table of Contents
Part 1: Theory and Observation in Quantum Physics
1. Introduction
Part I. Theory and Observation
2. The Relationship between Theory and Observation
3. Classification of Terms and Sentences
4. Theory (In-)dependence
5. Ontological Status of Scientific Theories
Part II. Basics of Quantum Physics
6. The Classical Picture of the World
7. Experimental Basis of Quantum Physics
8. The Quantum Explanation
9. No-go Theorems
10. Interpretations
Part III. Reflections on Quantum Physics
11. Theory and Observation in Quantum Physics
12. Is Quantum Physics Acceptable?
13. Ontology of Quantum Physics
14. Conclusion
References
Part 2: Quantum Logic
Introduction
1. Fundamentals of Classical Logic and Quantum Mechanics
2. Quantum logic and the distributive law
3. Meaning and bivalence in Putnam's quantum logical system
4. Conclusion
Jan Philipp Dapprich studied physics and philosophy at Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf.
Annika Schuster studied philosophy at Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf.









