•  183
    Hempel's Dilemma and domains of physics
    Analysis 71 (4): 646-651. 2011.
    Hempel's Dilemma is the claim that physicalism is an ill-formed thesis because it can offer no account of the physics that it refers to: current physics will be discarded in the future, and we don't yet know the nature of future physics. This article confronts the first horn of the dilemma, and argues that our knowledge of current physics is sufficient for offering a physicalist ontology of the mind. We have good scientific evidence that future physics will be irrelevant to the mind-body problem…Read more
  •  171
    Niels Bohr’s Generalization of Classical Mechanics
    Foundations of Physics 35 (3): 347-371. 2005.
    We clarify Bohr’s interpretation of quantum mechanics by demonstrating the central role played by his thesis that quantum theory is a rational generalization of classical mechanics. This thesis is essential for an adequate understanding of his insistence on the indispensability of classical concepts, his account of how the quantum formalism gets its meaning, and his belief that hidden variable interpretations are impossible
  •  158
    Does Black Hole Complementarity Answer Hawking’s Information Loss Paradox?
    Philosophy of Science 72 (5): 1336-1349. 2005.
    A proper understanding of black hole complementarity as a response to the information loss paradox requires recognizing the essential role played by arguments for the applicability and limitations of effective semiclassical theories. I argue that this perspective sheds important light on the arguments advanced by Susskind, Thorlacius, and Uglum—although ultimately I argue that their position is unsatisfactory. I also consider the argument offered by ’t Hooft for the breakdown of microcausality a…Read more
  •  60
    Black hole remnants and classical vs. quantum gravity
    Proceedings of the Philosophy of Science Association 2001 (3). 2001.
    Belot, Earman, and Ruetsche (1999) dismiss the black hole remnant proposal as an inadequate response to the Hawking information loss paradox. I argue that their criticisms are misplaced and that, properly understood, remnants do offer a substantial reply to the argument against the possibility of unitary evolution in spacetimes that contain evaporating black holes. The key to understanding these proposals lies in recognizing that the question of where and how our current theories break down is a…Read more
  •  57
    Scientific Structuralism (edited book)
    Springer Science+Business Media. 2011.
    This book will be of particular interest to those philosophers, scientists, and mathematicians who are interested in the foundations of science.
  •  46
    Interactions and the Consistency of Black Hole Complementarity
    International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 25 (4): 371-386. 2011.
    Presentations of black hole complementarity by van Dongen and de Haro, as well as by 't Hooft, suffer from a mistaken claim that interactions between matter falling into a black hole and the emitted Hawking-like radiation should lead to a failure of commutativity between space-like-related observables localized inside and outside the black hole. I show that this conclusion is not supported by our standard understanding of quantum interactions. We have no reason to believe that near-horizon inter…Read more
  •  46
    1. Petkov assumes that the standard relativistic interpretations of measurement procedures are to be respected, but this is precisely what 3D-er (the 3-dimensionalist) will deny. Petkov’s apparent contradictions are due to the fact that he considers an inconsistent mixture of 3D ontology and the standard interpretation of special relativity
  •  44
    Complementarity, wave-particle duality, and domains of applicability
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 59 136-142. 2017.
  •  36
    Horizons of Description: Black Holes and Complementarity
    Dissertation, University of Notre Dame. 2003.
    Niels Bohr famously argued that a consistent understanding of quantum mechanics requires a new epistemic framework, which he named complementarity . This position asserts that even in the context of quantum theory, classical concepts must be used to understand and communicate measurement results. The apparent conflict between certain classical descriptions is avoided by recognizing that their application now crucially depends on the measurement context. ;Recently it has been argued that a new fo…Read more
  •  15
    Black Hole Remnants and Classical vs. Quantum Gravity
    Philosophy of Science 68 (S3). 2001.
    Belot, Earman, and Ruetsche dismiss the black hole remnant proposal as an inadequate response to the Hawking information loss paradox. I argue that their criticisms are misplaced and that, properly understood, remnants do offer a substantial reply to the argument against the possibility of unitary evolution in spacetimes that contain evaporating black holes. The key to understanding these proposals lies in recognizing that the question of where and how our current theories break down is at the h…Read more