This book condenses some of the critical features of the discussion about the interpretative problems of quantum mechanics, pointing out some possible ways out of the conundrum. In order to set the road for these matters, chapter one introduces a conceptual history of the theory and its alternative interpretations. Chapter two profiles a taxonomy of the interpretative problems and some possible solutions, focused in the so-called measurement problem. Chapter three questions the thesis of quantum mechanics becoming what it is due to historical contingency. Finally, in chapter four, an argument is advanced to consider one particular interpretation –the causal account- as an alternative view that may help with the solution of the interpretative knot.
- Cover
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Content
- Preface
- 1. Historical roots of the quantum interpretation
- 1.1 A history of two (and more) interpretations.
- 1.2 Bell inequalities and the quantum mechanical challenge to locality
- 2. Beyond Copenhagen: the measurement problem
- 2.1 Answering the quantum measurement problem in terms of decoherence
- 2.2 Answering the quantum measurement problem in terms of histories
- 2.3 Alternative answers to the quantum measurement problem
- 3. About the social construction of quantum mechanics
- 3.1 The dilemma of determinism
- 3.2 Forman theses
- 4. Bohm’s version of quantum mechanics
- 4.1 About the aims of science
- 4.2 About the quantum formalism and its interpretation
- 4.3 Copenhagen’s interpretation
- 4.4 Bohm’s interpretation
- 4.5 Locality, separability and Einstein’s indifference
- Bibliographical references