•  91
    Some reflections on quantum logic and schrödinger's cat
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 30 (1): 27-39. 1979.
  •  92
    Hidden variables and locality
    Foundations of Physics 6 (5): 511-525. 1976.
    Bell's problem of the possibility of a local hidden variable theory of quantum phenomena is considered in the context of the general problem of representing the statistical states of a quantum mechanical system by measures on a classical probability space, and Bell's result is presented as a generalization of Maczynski's theorem for maximal magnitudes. The proof of this generalization is shown to depend on the impossibility of recovering the quantum statistics for sequential probabilities in a c…Read more
  •  42
    Quantum probabilities: an information-theoretic interpretation
    In Claus Beisbart & Stephan Hartmann (eds.), Probabilities in Physics, Oxford University Press. pp. 231. 2011.
  •  117
    Local Realism and Conditional Probability
    Foundations of Physics 36 (4): 585-601. 2006.
    Emilio Santos has argued (Santos, Studies in History and Philosophy of Physics http: //arxiv-org/abs/quant-ph/0410193) that to date, no experiment has provided a loophole-free refutation of Bell’s inequalities. He believes that this provides strong evidence for the principle of local realism, and argues that we should reject this principle only if we have extremely strong evidence. However, recent work by Malley and Fine (Non-commuting observables and local realism, http: //arxiv-org/abs/quant-p…Read more
  •  43
    Quantum Computation: Where Does the Speed-up Come From?
    In Alisa Bokulich & Gregg Jaeger (eds.), Philosophy of quantum information and entanglement, Cambridge University Press. pp. 231--246. 2010.
  •  38
    Poincaré's “Les conceptions nouvelles de la matière”
    with William Demopoulos and Melanie Frappier
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 43 (4): 221-225. 2012.
    We present a translation of Poincaré's hitherto untranslated 1912 essay together with a brief introduction describing the essay's contemporary interest, both for Poincaré scholarship and for the history and philosophy of atomism. In the introduction we distinguish two easily conflated strands in Poincaré's thinking about atomism, one focused on the possibility of deciding the atomic hypothesis, the other focused on the question whether it can ever be determined that the analysis of matter has a …Read more
  •  116
    Contextuality and Nonlocality in 'No Signaling' Theories
    Foundations of Physics 39 (7): 690-711. 2009.
    We define a family of ‘no signaling’ bipartite boxes with arbitrary inputs and binary outputs, and with a range of marginal probabilities. The defining correlations are motivated by the Klyachko version of the Kochen-Specker theorem, so we call these boxes Kochen-Specker-Klyachko boxes or, briefly, KS-boxes. The marginals cover a variety of cases, from those that can be simulated classically to the superquantum correlations that saturate the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt inequality, when the KS-box…Read more