Quantum Strangeness: Wrestling with Bell's Theorem and the Ultimate Nature of Reality

Quantum Strangeness: Wrestling with Bell's Theorem and the Ultimate Nature of Reality

Quantum Strangeness: Wrestling with Bell's Theorem and the Ultimate Nature of Reality

Quantum Strangeness: Wrestling with Bell's Theorem and the Ultimate Nature of Reality

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Overview

A physicist's efforts to understand the enigma that is quantum mechanics.

Quantum mechanics is one of the glories of our age. The theory lies at the heart of modern society. Quantum mechanics is one of our most valuable forecasters--a "great predictor." It has immeasurably altered our conception of the natural world. Its philosophical implications are earthshaking. But quantum mechanics steadfastly refuses to speak of many things; it deals in probabilities rather than giving explicit descriptions. It never explains. Einstein, one of its creators, considered the theory incomplete. Even now, many years after the creation of quantum mechanics, physicists continue to argue about it. Astrophysicist George Greenstein has been both fascinated and confused by quantum mechanics for his entire career. In this book, he describes, engagingly and accessibly, his efforts to understand the enigma that is quantum mechanics.

The fastest route to the insight into the ultimate nature of reality revealed by quantum mechanics, Greenstein writes, is through Bell's Theorem, which concerns reality at the quantum level; and Bell's 1964 discovery drives Greenstein's quest. Greenstein recounts a scientific odyssey that begins with Einstein, continues with Bell, and culminates with today's push to develop an industry of quantum machines. Along the way, he discusses spin, entanglement, experimental metaphysics, and quantum teleportation, often with easy-to-grasp analogies. We have known for decades that the world of the quantum was strange, but, Greenstein says, not until John Bell came along did we know just how strange.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262549301
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 09/19/2023
Pages: 160
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

George Greenstein is Sidney Dillon Emeritus Professor of Astronomy at Amherst College. He is the author of Frozen Star: Of Pulsars, Black Holes, and the Nature of Stars, The Symbiotic Universe: Life and Mind in the Cosmos, The Quantum Challenge: Modern Research on the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics (with Arthur Zajonc), and other books.

David Kaiser is Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science and Professor of Physics at MIT. He is the author of several award-winning books on the history of science, including Quantum Legacies: Dispatches from an Uncertain World, and the editor of Becoming MIT: Moments of Decision (MIT Press). His work has been featured in Science, Nature, the New York Times, and the New Yorker.

Table of Contents

Foreword by David Kaiser xi
Acknowledgments xvii
1. The Great Predictor 1
Background to Bell
2. Silence 11
3. Half a Theory? 17
4. The Solvay Battles 21
5. Spin 29
6. An Impoverished Language? 33
7. The EPR Paradox 37
8. Hidden Variables 41
Bell's Theorem
9. A Hidden Variable Theory 45
10. Bell's Theorem 55
11. Stigma 63
Experimental Metaphysics
12. Experimental 71
13. ...Metaphysics 93
14. Nonlocality 97
15. Quantum machines 101
16. A New Universe 113
Appendix 1: The GHZ Theorem 121
Appendix 2: Further Reading 125
Notes 129
Index 135

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

George Greenstein tried for a long time to develop a clear understanding of why Bell's inequalities are important, and one day he had, as he says, an epiphany. We must thank him for sharing with the reader the long and difficult path that led him to his final clarification.

Alain Aspect, Professor at Institut d'Optique Graduate School, Université Paris Saclay.

This is one of the finest books I have read on quantum mechanics: lucid, and careful, but also entertaining, honest and generous. It gets to the core of the matter, exposing the strangeness we perceive within quantum theory. George Greenstein doesn't pretend to give you the answers, but he does something more valuable: he reveals the right questions.

Philip Ball, author of Beyond Weird: Why Everything You Thought You Knew About Quantum Physics Is Different.

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