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81The Image of Eternity: Roots of Time in the Physical WorldPhilosophical Review 91 (4): 607. 1982.
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259Change without change, and how to observe it in general relativitySynthese 141 (3). 2004.All change involves temporal variation of properties. There is change in the physical world only if genuine physical magnitudes take on different values at different times. I defend the possibility of change in a general relativistic world against two skeptical arguments recently presented by John Earman. Each argument imposes severe restrictions on what may count as a genuine physical magnitude in general relativity. These restrictions seem justified only as long as one ignores the fact that ge…Read more
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36Reduction, Time and Reality: Studies in the Philosophy of the Natural SciencesCambridge University Press. 1981.The contributors to this 1981 volume are all concerned with scientific realism, but each author questions or rejects aspects of the way it has traditionally been discussed. There are three main foci of attention - reduction, time and modality - and the analyses bring out complexities and difficulties obscured in the standard accounts of scientific realism. The papers are powerful and original, representing some of the best in modern philosophy of science, and each were specifically commissioned …Read more
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1Quantum Measurement, Decoherence and Modal InterpretationsMinnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science 17. 1998.
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116A pragmatist view of the metaphysics of entanglementSynthese 1-38. 2016.Quantum entanglement is widely believed to be a feature of physical reality with undoubted metaphysical implications. But Schrödinger introduced entanglement as a theoretical relation between representatives of the quantum states of two systems. Entanglement represents a physical relation only if quantum states are elements of physical reality. So arguments for metaphysical holism or nonseparability from entanglement rest on a questionable view of quantum theory. Assignment of entangled quantum …Read more
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544On the reality of gauge potentialsPhilosophy of Science 68 (4): 432-455. 2001.Classically, a gauge potential was merely a convenient device for generating a corresponding gauge field. Quantum-mechanically, a gauge potential lays claim to independent status as a further feature of the physical situation. But whether this is a local or a global feature is not made any clearer by the variety of mathematical structures used to represent it. I argue that in the theory of electromagnetism (or a non-Abelian generalization) that describes quantum particles subject to a classical …Read more
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113Inconsistency, Asymmetry, and Non-Locality: A Philosophical Investigation of Classical ElectrodynamicsPhilosophical Review 117 (3): 458-462. 2008.
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149XII*—Physicalist ImperialismProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79 (1): 191-212. 1979.Richard Healey; XII*—Physicalist Imperialism, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 79, Issue 1, 1 June 1979, Pages 191–212, https://doi.org/10.1093/a.
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122Gauging What's Real: The Conceptual Foundations of Contemporary Gauge TheoriesOxford University Press. 2009.This is a prize-winning study of an area of physics not previously explored by philosophy: gauge theory. Gauge theories have provided our most successful representations of the fundamental forces of nature. But how do such representations work? Healey defends an original answer to this question.
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284Science without representationAnalysis 70 (3): 536-547. 2010.I think van Fraassen is right to see the development of quantum mechanics as a turning point for physical science with a profound moral for philosophy, and not just for the philosophy of science. But the moral is not that even a completely successful physical theory may fail to account for the appearances by showing how they arise within the reality it represents. The moral is more radical: it is that a physical theory – even a fundamental theory – may be completely successful in all its applica…Read more
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402Can Physics Coherently Deny the Reality of Time?Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 50 293-. 2002.The conceptual and technical difficulties involved in creating a quantum theory of gravity have led some physicists to question, and even in some cases to deny, the reality of time. More surprisingly, this denial has found a sympathetic audience among certain philosophers of physics. What should we make of these wild ideas? Does it even make sense to deny the reality of time? In fact physical science has been chipping away at common sense aspects of time ever since its inception. Section 1 offer…Read more
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434Reduction and Emergence in Bose-Einstein CondensatesFoundations of Physics 41 (6): 1007-1030. 2011.A closer look at some proposed Gedanken-experiments on BECs promises to shed light on several aspects of reduction and emergence in physics. These include the relations between classical descriptions and different quantum treatments of macroscopic systems, and the emergence of new properties and even new objects as a result of spontaneous symmetry breaking
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131Quantum Decoherence in a Pragmatist View: Dispelling Feynman’s Mystery (review)Foundations of Physics 42 (12): 1534-1555. 2012.The quantum theory of decoherence plays an important role in a pragmatist interpretation of quantum theory. It governs the descriptive content of claims about values of physical magnitudes and offers advice on when to use quantum probabilities as a guide to their truth. The content of a claim is to be understood in terms of its role in inferences. This promises a better treatment of meaning than that offered by Bohr. Quantum theory models physical systems with no mention of measurement: it is de…Read more
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594Quantum Theory: A Pragmatist ApproachBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 63 (4): 729-771. 2012.While its applications have made quantum theory arguably the most successful theory in physics, its interpretation continues to be the subject of lively debate within the community of physicists and philosophers concerned with conceptual foundations. This situation poses a problem for a pragmatist for whom meaning derives from use. While disputes about how to use quantum theory have arisen from time to time, they have typically been quickly resolved, and consensus reached, within the relevant sc…Read more
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163Nonseparable processes and causal explanationStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 25 (3): 337-374. 1994.If physical reality is nonseparable, as quantum mechanics suggests, then it may contain processes of a quite novel kind. Such nonseparable processes could connect space-like separated events without violating relativity theory or any defensible locality condition. Appeal to nonseparable processes could ground theoretical explanations of such otherwise puzzling phenomena as the two-slit experiment, and EPR- type correlations. We find such phenomena puzzling because they threaten cherished concept…Read more
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174How Quantum Theory Helps Us ExplainBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 66 (1): 1-43. 2015.I offer an account of how the quantum theory we have helps us explain the enormous variety of phenomena it is generally taken to explain. The account depends on what I have elsewhere called a pragmatist interpretation of the theory. This rejects views according to which a quantum state describes or represents a physical system, holding instead that it functions as a source of sound advice to physically situated agents like us on the content and appropriate degree of belief about matters concerni…Read more
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27The Metaphysics of Emptiness "La Métaphysique de la Vacuité"In E. Gunzig & S. Diner (eds.), Le Vide: Univers du Tout et du Rien, eds. E. Gunzig and S. Diner, Revue de l’Université de Bruxelles. Éditions Complexe, 1998., Revue De L’université De Bruxelles. Éditions Complexe,. 1998.Is there a vacuum in nature? This is a question which preoccupied natural philosophers for millennia. Great thinkers including Democritus and Newton maintained the existence of a vacuum, while Aristotle, Descartes and Leibniz argued strongly that there was not, and perhaps could not be, any such thing. A casual glance at the literature of contemporary physics may leave the impression that scientific progress has produced a definitive positive answer, so that the philosophers' debates are now of …Read more
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187Dissipating the quantum measurement problemTopoi 14 (1): 55-65. 1995.The integration of recent work on decoherence into a so-called modal interpretation offers a promising new approach to the measurement problem in quantum mechanics. In this paper I explain and develop this approach in the context of the interactive interpretation presented in Healey (1989). I begin by questioning a number of assumptions which are standardly made in setting up the measurement problem, and I conclude that no satisfactory solution can afford to ignore the influence of the environme…Read more
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82Search for a Naturalistic World View: Volumes I and II by Abner Shimony (review)Journal of Philosophy 93 (2): 92-100. 1996.
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Book Review: Quantum Mechanics: An Empiricist View (review)Foundations of Physics 23 (12): 1613-1616. 1993.
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173Quantum realism: Naïveté is no excuseSynthese 42 (1). 1979.The work of Gleason and of Kochen and Specker has been thought to refute a naïve realist approach to quantum mechanics. The argument of this paper substantially bears out this conclusion. The assumptions required by their work are not arbitrary, but have sound theoretical justification. Moreover, if they are false, there seems no reason why their falsity should not be demonstrable in some sufficiently ingenious experiment. Suitably interpreted, the work of Bell and Wigner may be seen to yield in…Read more
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443Physical compositionStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 44 (1): 48-62. 2013.Atomistic metaphysics motivated an explanatory strategy which science has pursued with great success since the scientific revolution. By decomposing matter into its atomic and subatomic parts physics gave us powerful explanations and accurate predictions as well as providing a unifying framework for the rest of science. The success of the decompositional strategy has encouraged a widespread conviction that the physical world forms a compositional hierarchy that physics and other sciences are pro…Read more
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88Local Causality, Probability and ExplanationIn Mary Bell & Shan Gao (eds.), Quantum Nonlocality and Reality: 50 Years of Bell's Theorem, Cambridge University Press. 2016.In papers published in the 25 years following his famous 1964 proof John Bell refined and reformulated his views on locality and causality. Although his formulations of local causality were in terms of probability, he had little to say about that notion. But assumptions about probability are implicit in his arguments and conclusions. Probability does not conform to these assumptions when quantum mechanics is applied to account for the particular correlations Bell argues are locally inexplicable.…Read more
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196A note on Van Fraassen's modal interpretation of quantum mechanicsPhilosophy of Science 63 (1): 91-104. 1996.Although there has been some discussion in the literature of Bas van Fraassen's modal interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, it has for the most part been concentrated on difficulties that van Fraassen's viewpoint shares with those of some other authors, including Kochen, Dieks, and Healey. van Fraassen's approach has, however, some problems of its own; in this note we want to focus on what seems to us to be one of the most serious of these. The difficulty concerns immediately repeated non-disturb…Read more
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177Holism and nonseparability in physicsStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.It has sometimes been suggested that quantum phenomena exhibit a characteristic holism or nonseparability, and that this distinguishes quantum from classical physics. One puzzling quantum phenomenon arises when one performs measurements of spin or polarization on certain separated quantum systems. The results of these measurements exhibit patterns of statistical correlation that resist traditional causal explanation. Some have held that it is possible to understand these patterns as instances or…Read more
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138Review of Tim Maudlin, The Metaphysics Within Physics (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (2). 2008.
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151This paper aims to show how adoption of a pragmatist interpretation permits a satisfactory resolution of the quantum measurement problem. The classic measurement problem dissolves once one recognizes that it is not the function of the quantum state to describe or represent the behavior of a quantum system. The residual problem of when, and to what, to apply the Born Rule may then be resolved by judicious appeal to decoherence. This can give sense to talk of measurements of photons and other part…Read more
Tucson, Arizona, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Physical Science |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Physical Science |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| Metaphysics |