Collapse Theories
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Description: Survey of the dynamical reduction program; by Giancarlo Ghirardi.
Collapse Theories (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) First published Thu Mar 7, 2002; substantive revision Tue Nov 8, 2011 Quantum mechanics, with its revolutionary implications, has posed innumerable problems to philosophers of science. In particular, it has suggested reconsidering basic concepts such as the existence of a world that is, at least to some extent, independent of the observer, the possibility of getting reliable and objective knowledge about it, and the possibility of taking (under appropriate circumstances) certain properties to be objectively possessed by physical systems. It has also raised many others questions which are well known to those involved in the debate on the interpretation of this pillar of modern science. One can argue that most of the problems are not only due to the intrinsic revolutionary nature of the phenomena which have led to the development of the theory. They are also related to the fact that, in its standard formulation and interpretation, quantum mechanics is a theory which is excellent (in fact it has met with a success unprecedented in the history of science) in telling us everything about
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Date | activated: 04-Oct-1985 last updated: 07-May-2009 expires: 31-Jul-2014 |