Nature Loves To Hide. Quantum Physics And The Nature Of Reality, A Western Perspective

Shimon Malin

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Shimon Malin - Nature Loves To Hide. Quantum Physics And The Nature Of Reality, A Western Perspective.
The strangeness of modern physics has sparked several popular books - such as The Tao of Physics - that explore its affinity with Eastern mysticism. But... Lire la suite
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Résumé

The strangeness of modern physics has sparked several popular books - such as The Tao of Physics - that explore its affinity with Eastern mysticism. But the founders of quantum mechanics were educated in the classical traditions of Western civilization and Western philosophy. In Nature Loves to Hide , physicist Shimon Malin takes readers on a fascinating tour of quantum theory - one that turns to Western philosophical thought to clarify the implications of this enigmatic theory. Malin translates quantum mechanics into plain English, explaining its origins and workings against the backdrop of the famous debate between Niels Bohr and the skeptical Albert Einstein. Then he moves on to build a philosophical framework that can account for the quantum nature of reality. He shows, for instance, how Platonic and Neoplatonic thought resonates with quantum theory. He draws out the linkage between the concepts of Neoplatonism and the more recent process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. The universe, Whitehead wrote, is an organic whole, composed not of lifeless objects, but "elementary experiences." Beginning with Whitehead's insight, Malin shows how this concept of "throbs of experience" expresses quantum reality, with its subatomic uncertainties, its constituents that are waves and also particles, its emphasis on acts of measurement. Once any educated person could explain the universe as a vast Newtonian web of cause and effect, but since quantum theory, reality again appears to be richer and more mysterious than we had thought. Writing with broad humanistic insight and deep knowledge of science, and using delightful conversations with fictional astronauts Peter and Julie to explain more difficult concepts, Shimon Malin offers a profound new understanding of the nature of reality-one that shows a deep continuity with aspects of our Western philosophical tradition going back 2500 years, and that feels more deeply satisfying, and truer, than the clockwork universe of Newton.

Sommaire

  • THE QUANDARY
    • Mach's Shadow
    • Einstein's Dilemma
    • The Call of Complementarity
    • Waves of Nothingness
    • Paul Dirac and the Spin of the Electron
    • An Irresistible Force Meets an Immovable Rock
    • "Nature Loves to Hide"
  • FROM A UNIVERSE OF OBJECTS TO A UNIVERSE OF EXPERIENCES
    • The Elusive Obvious
    • Objectivation
    • In and Out of Space and Time
    • "Nature Makes a Choice"
    • Nature Alive
    • Flashes of Existence
    • The Expression of Knowledge
    • A Universe of Experience
    • The Potential and the Actual
  • PHYSICS AND THE ONE
    • Levels of Being
    • Our Place in the Universe
    • Physics and the One

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    04/01/2002
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    0-19-513894-5
  • EAN
    9780195138948
  • Présentation
    Relié
  • Nb. de pages
    290 pages
  • Poids
    0.61 Kg
  • Dimensions
    16,5 cm × 24,5 cm × 2,5 cm

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Shimon Malin

Shimon Malin is a Professor of Physics at Colgate University. A leading authority on quantum mechanics, General Relativity and cosmology, and philosophy, he is the author or co-author of three books and some fifty scientific papers. He lives in Brattleboro, Vermont.

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