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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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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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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.
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 |