Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 October 2009
Summary
When I decided to enter research on modal interpretations of quantum mechanics, I barely knew what it was about. I had attended a talk on the subject and read bits about them, but the ideas behind these interpretations didn't stick in my mind. Modal interpretations were at that time (1993) not widely known, and their approach to quantum mechanics was not common knowledge in the philosophy of physics. So my decision was a step in the dark. But what I did know was that I was beginning research on one of the most irritating and challenging problems of contemporary physics. Namely, the problem that quantum theories, unlike all other fundamental theories in physics, cannot be understood as descriptions of an outside world consisting of systems with definite physical properties.
Your decision to read this book may be a step in the dark as well, because modal interpretations are presently, especially among physicists, still rather unknown. The reason for this may lie in their somewhat isolated and slow development. The first modal interpretation was formulated in 1972 by Van Fraassen. Then, in the 1980s, Kochen, Dieks and Healey put forward similar proposals which, later on, were united under Van Fraassen's heading as modal interpretations. But these proposals were not immediately developed to fully elaborated accounts of quantum mechanics. Moreover, modal interpretations were proposed and discussed in journals and at conferences which were mainly directed towards philosophers of physics, rather than towards general physicists. Modal interpretations are in that sense true philosophers' understandings of quantum mechanics.
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- Information
- A Philosopher's Understanding of Quantum MechanicsPossibilities and Impossibilities of a Modal Interpretation, pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000