• PhilPapers
  • PhilPeople
  • PhilArchive
  • PhilEvents
  • PhilJobs
  • Sign in
PhilPeople
 
  • Sign in
  • News Feed
  • Find Philosophers
  • Departments
  • Radar
  • Help
 
profile-cover
Drag to reposition
profile picture

Paul Teller

  •  Home
  •  Publications
    106
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    7
  •  News and Updates
    31

 More details
Email (login required)
  • All publications (106)
  •  700
    Rise, and (Impending) Fall of Physics Fundamentalism
    Science is widely taken to aim, and often to succeed, in producing truths, a “mirror of nature”. Not so. Instead, science fashions models, understood broadly as representations that are never both completely precise and completely accurate. . This chapter discusses how the misconception arose and how it is now being corrected. The account begins with a tension between the founding metaphors of the Scientific Revolution, reading God’s book of nature and the clock metaphor. The former pre-fram…Read more
    Science is widely taken to aim, and often to succeed, in producing truths, a “mirror of nature”. Not so. Instead, science fashions models, understood broadly as representations that are never both completely precise and completely accurate. . This chapter discusses how the misconception arose and how it is now being corrected. The account begins with a tension between the founding metaphors of the Scientific Revolution, reading God’s book of nature and the clock metaphor. The former pre-frames laws and physics fundamentalism; the latter the discovery of mechanisms, how things work. Laws aimed at truth, but the world is too complicated for us to get generalizations exactly right. Likewise, the complexity of mechanisms always requires simplifying idealization. Further, different problems require different idealizations and so a pluralism of accounts. The pluralism is unproblematic as different problems about the same subject matter can be consistently dealt with using very different schemes of simplification.
  •  733
    Williamson’s Epistemicism and Properties Accounts of Predicates
    If the semantic value of predicates are, as Williamson assumes, properties, then epistemicism is immediate. Epistemicism fails, so also this properties view of predicates. I use examination of Williamsons position as a foil, showing that his two positive arguments for bivalence fail, and that his efforts to rescue epistemicism from obvious problems fail to the point of incoherence. In Part II I argue that, despite the properties view’s problems, it has an important role to play in combinatori…Read more
    If the semantic value of predicates are, as Williamson assumes, properties, then epistemicism is immediate. Epistemicism fails, so also this properties view of predicates. I use examination of Williamsons position as a foil, showing that his two positive arguments for bivalence fail, and that his efforts to rescue epistemicism from obvious problems fail to the point of incoherence. In Part II I argue that, despite the properties view’s problems, it has an important role to play in combinatorial semantics. We may separate the problem of how smallest parts of language get attached to the world from the problem of how those parts combine to form complex semantic values. For the latter problem we idealize and treat the smallest semantic values as properties (and referents). So doing functions to put to one side how the smallest parts get worldly attachment, a problem that would just get in the way of understanding the combinatorics. Attachment to the world has to be studied separately, and I review some of the options. As a bonus we see why, mostly, higher order vagueness is an artifact of taking properties as semantic values literally instead of as a simplifying idealization.
    Epistemic Theories of VaguenessTheories of Vagueness, Misc
  •  46
    Karel Lambert and Gordon G. Brittan Jr. An introduction to the philosophy of science. Second, revised and expanded edition. Ridgeview Publishing Company, Reseda, Calif., 1979, x + 164 pp (review)
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 47 (2): 476-477. 1982.
  •  144
    Quantum Mechanics: An Empiricist View
    with Bas C. van Fraassen
    Philosophical Review 104 (3): 457. 1995.
    Modal Interpretations
  •  185
    Algebraic constraints on hidden variables
    with Arthur Fine
    Foundations of Physics 8 (7-8): 629-636. 1978.
    In the contemporary discussion of hidden variable interpretations of quantum mechanics, much attention has been paid to the “no hidden variable” proof contained in an important paper of Kochen and Specker. It is a little noticed fact that Bell published a proof of the same result the preceding year, in his well-known 1966 article, where it is modestly described as a corollary to Gleason's theorem. We want to bring out the great simplicity of Bell's formulation of this result and to show how it c…Read more
    In the contemporary discussion of hidden variable interpretations of quantum mechanics, much attention has been paid to the “no hidden variable” proof contained in an important paper of Kochen and Specker. It is a little noticed fact that Bell published a proof of the same result the preceding year, in his well-known 1966 article, where it is modestly described as a corollary to Gleason's theorem. We want to bring out the great simplicity of Bell's formulation of this result and to show how it can be extended in certain respects
    Quantum NonlocalityBell's Theorem
  •  1
    Fictions, Fictionalization and Truth in Science
    In Mauricio Suárez (ed.), Fictions in Science: Philosophical Essays on Modeling and Idealization, Routledge. pp. 235--247. 2008.
    Verisimilitude
  •  148
    Ronald Yoshida's Reduction in the Physical SciencesReduction in the Physical Sciences
    with Ronald Yoshida
    Noûs 14 (1): 136. 1980.
    ReductionismTheory ReductionReduction in Physical Science
  •  135
    Explaining Science: A Cognitive Approach. Ronald N. Giere
    Philosophy of Science 57 (4): 729-731. 1990.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Cognitive Science, Miscellaneous
  •  265
    The Shaky Game: Einstein, Realism, and the Quantum Theory. Arthur Fine
    Philosophy of Science 55 (1): 155-156. 1988.
    History of Quantum MechanicsEinstein-Podolsky-RosenInterpretations of Quantum Mechanics, MiscProbabi…Read more
    History of Quantum MechanicsEinstein-Podolsky-RosenInterpretations of Quantum Mechanics, MiscProbabilities in Quantum MechanicsBell's TheoremSchrodinger's CatNatural Ontological Attitude
  •  233
    Referential and Perspectival Realism
    Spontaneous Generations 9 (1): 151-164. 2018.
    Ronald Giere has argued that at its best science gives us knowledge only from different “perspectives,” but that this knowledge still counts as scientific realism. Others have noted that his “perspectival realism” is in tension with scientific realism as traditionally understood: How can different, even conflicting, perspectives give us what there is really? This essay outlines a program that makes good on Giere’s idea with a fresh understanding of “realism” that eases this tension.
    Perspectival Realism
  •  2
    An Interpretative Introduction to Quantum Field Theory
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (1): 152-153. 1996.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  154
    Robots, Action, and the “Essential Indexical”
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 82 (3): 763-771. 2011.
    Metaphysics of MindRobotics
  •  525
    Relational Holism and Quantum Mechanics1
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (1): 71-81. 1986.
    One can give a strong sense to the idea that a relation does not 'reduce' to non-relational properties by saying that a relation does not supervene upon the non-relational properties of its relata. That there are such inherent relations I call the doctrine of relational holism, a doctrine which seems to conflict with traditional ideas about physicalism. At least parts of classical physics seem to be free of relational holism, but quantum mechanics, on at least some interpretations, incorporates …Read more
    One can give a strong sense to the idea that a relation does not 'reduce' to non-relational properties by saying that a relation does not supervene upon the non-relational properties of its relata. That there are such inherent relations I call the doctrine of relational holism, a doctrine which seems to conflict with traditional ideas about physicalism. At least parts of classical physics seem to be free of relational holism, but quantum mechanics, on at least some interpretations, incorporates the doctrine in an all pervasive way
    MereologyQuantum NonlocalityRelational InterpretationsProbabilities in Quantum Mechanics
  •  71
    Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 71 (1): 19-25. 1974.
    Inductive Logic
  •  35
    Some Discussion and Extension of Manfred Bierwisch's Work on German Adjectivals
    Foundations of Language 5 (2): 185-217. 1969.
    Philosophy of Language
  •  56
    Review: Karel Lambert, Gordon G. Brittan, An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science (review)
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 47 (2): 476-477. 1982.
  •  36
    Comments on Niiniluoto and Uchii
    PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1976. 1976.
    Inductive Logic
  •  97
    Professor Fetzer on epistemic possibility
    Philosophia 4 (2-3): 337-338. 1974.
    Epistemic Possibility
  •  428
    Goodman's theory of projection
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (3): 219-238. 1969.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsNelson GoodmanPhilosophy of LinguisticsPhilosophy of Psychology
  •  213
    Epistemic possibility
    Philosophia 2 (4): 303-320. 1972.
    Epistemic PossibilityEpistemic Modals
  •  42
    Subjectivity and knowing what it's like
    In Ansgar Beckermann, Hans Flohr & Jaegwon Kim (eds.), Emergence or Reduction?: Prospects for Nonreductive Physicalism, De Gruyter. pp. 180-200. 1992.
    What is it Like?Varieties of Knowledge
  •  62
    A contemporary look at emergence
    In Ansgar Beckermann, Hans Flohr & Jaegwon Kim (eds.), Emergence or Reduction?: Prospects for Nonreductive Physicalism, De Gruyter. pp. 139-154. 1992.
    Emergence
  •  77
    Is supervenience just disguised reduction?
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 23 (1): 93-100. 1985.
    Supervenience, General
  •  122
    Vacuum Concepts, Potentia, and the Quantum Field Theoretic Vacuum Explained for All
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 18 (1): 332-342. 1993.
    Quantum Field Theory
  •  155
    Achinstein, Peter & Barker, S. F., Eds. (1969) The Legacy of Logical Positivism: Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press. £4.05 (8u.) Pp. x+300. (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 22 (1): 61-62. 1971.
    This volume does not succeed in encapsulating the legacy of Logical Positivism. Much more than 291 pages would not suffice for the things of value the movement has left us. Logical Positivism has clarified old doctrines and provided us with new ones. It has encouraged new standards of care, clarity, and philosophical honesty. These in turn have fostered what I believe to be the movement's greatest legacy: a clear understanding of the difficulties with the prima facie attractive doctrines associa…Read more
    This volume does not succeed in encapsulating the legacy of Logical Positivism. Much more than 291 pages would not suffice for the things of value the movement has left us. Logical Positivism has clarified old doctrines and provided us with new ones. It has encouraged new standards of care, clarity, and philosophical honesty. These in turn have fostered what I believe to be the movement's greatest legacy: a clear understanding of the difficulties with the prima facie attractive doctrines associated with the movement. This is a propitious basis on which to extend our inquiries. What the volume does provide is a fair sample of the legacy's contemporary effect on the philosophy of science. Besides the three historical sketches, the papers review known difficulties with Logical Positivist views and present new doctrines inspired by foregoing critical examination. None of the criticisms is new, and for the most part they have been more clearly and thoroughly presented elsewhere. The papers which attempt to work out new ideas are below the standard we all would like to see in (and contribute to) the literature, but up to the standard of what we usually find. Consequently, the volume is best used as a source for particular authors' views on particular subjects.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsLogical Empiricism
  •  137
    On the problem of hidden variables for quantum mechanical observables with continuous spectra
    Philosophy of Science 44 (3): 475-477. 1977.
    Existing "no hidden variable proofs" for quantum mechanics deal exclusively with observables with discrete spectra. This note shows that similar results hold for observables with continuous spectra
    Interpretation of Quantum MechanicsQuantum Mechanics, Miscellaneous
  •  183
    Is Indistinguishability in Quantum Mechanics Conventional?
    with Michael Redhead
    Foundations of Physics 30 (6): 951-957. 2000.
    Darrin Belousek has argued that the indistinguishability of quantum particles is conventional “in the Duhemian–Einsteinian sense,” in part by critially examining prior arguments given by Redhead and Teller. Belousek's discussion provides a useful occasion to clarify some of those arguments, acknowledge respects in which they were misleading, and comment on how they can be strengthened. We also comment briefly on the relevant sense of “conventional.”
    Quantum IndeterminacyScientific Conventionalism
  •  327
    Computer proof
    Journal of Philosophy 77 (12): 797-803. 1980.
    Computer Proof
  •  144
    The projection postulate as a fortuitous approximation
    Philosophy of Science 50 (3): 413-431. 1983.
    If we take the state function of quantum mechanics to describe belief states, arguments by Stairs and Friedman-Putnam show that the projection postulate may be justified as a kind of minimal change. But if the state function takes on a physical interpretation, it provides no more than what I call a fortuitous approximation of physical measurement processes, that is, an unsystematic form of approximation which should not be taken to correspond to some one univocal "measurement process" in nature.…Read more
    If we take the state function of quantum mechanics to describe belief states, arguments by Stairs and Friedman-Putnam show that the projection postulate may be justified as a kind of minimal change. But if the state function takes on a physical interpretation, it provides no more than what I call a fortuitous approximation of physical measurement processes, that is, an unsystematic form of approximation which should not be taken to correspond to some one univocal "measurement process" in nature. This fact suggests that the projection postulate does not provide a proper locus for interpretive investigation. Readers will also find section 3's analysis of fortuitous approximations of independent interest and presented without the perils of quantum mechanics
    Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
  •  144
    An Interpretive Introduction to Quantum Field Theory
    Princeton University Press. 1995.
    Quantum mechanics is a subject that has captured the imagination of a surprisingly broad range of thinkers, including many philosophers of science. Quantum field theory, however, is a subject that has been discussed mostly by physicists. This is the first book to present quantum field theory in a manner that makes it accessible to philosophers. Because it presents a lucid view of the theory and debates that surround the theory, An Interpretive Introduction to Quantum Field Theory will interest s…Read more
    Quantum mechanics is a subject that has captured the imagination of a surprisingly broad range of thinkers, including many philosophers of science. Quantum field theory, however, is a subject that has been discussed mostly by physicists. This is the first book to present quantum field theory in a manner that makes it accessible to philosophers. Because it presents a lucid view of the theory and debates that surround the theory, An Interpretive Introduction to Quantum Field Theory will interest students of physics as well as students of philosophy. Paul Teller presents the basic ideas of quantum field theory in a way that is understandable to readers who are familiar with non-relativistic quantum mechanics. He provides information about the physics of the theory without calculational detail, and he enlightens readers on how to think about the theory physically. Along the way, he dismantles some popular myths and clarifies the novel ways in which quantum field theory is both a theory about fields and about particles. His goal is to raise questions about the philosophical implications of the theory and to offer some tentative interpretive views of his own. This provocative and thoughtful book challenges philosophers to extend their thinking beyond the realm of quantum mechanics and it challenges physicists to consider the philosophical issues that their explorations have encouraged.
    Quantum Field Theory
  • Prev.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next
PhilPeople logo

On this site

  • Find a philosopher
  • Find a department
  • The Radar
  • Index of professional philosophers
  • Index of departments
  • Help
  • Acknowledgments
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Terms and conditions

Brought to you by

  • The PhilPapers Foundation
  • The American Philosophical Association
  • Centre for Digital Philosophy, Western University
PhilPeople is currently in Beta Sponsored by the PhilPapers Foundation and the American Philosophical Association
Feedback