Reflection in the Waves: The Interdividual Observer in a Quantum Mechanical World
The incredible success of quantum theory as a mathematical model makes it especially frustrating that we cannot agree on a plausible philosophical or metaphysical description of it. Some philosophers of science have noticed certain parallels between quantum theory and the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, and these parallels are deepened and strengthened if the “observer” of modern physics is associated with the “intellect” of scholastic ontology. In this case we are talking about a human observer. But this type of observer has a unique quality that is not considered at all by either physics or scholastic philosophythe human observer is mimetic and therefore “interdividual.” By taking this fundamental anthropological fact into account, it turns out that the critical gaps still separating Aquinas from modern physicists can be effectively closed, reconciling the realism of Aquinas with the empirical evidence of quantum mechanics. This book explores this new bridge between the physical and the humana bridge essentially designed by scholastic theory, clarified by mimetic theory, and built by quantum theoryand the path it opens to that metaphysical understanding for which philosophers of modern science have been striving. It is an understanding, not merely of the physical but of physics in the fuller sense of what is real and what is true. Here the reader will find a physics that describes the natural world and our place as mimetic observers within it.
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Reflection in the Waves: The Interdividual Observer in a Quantum Mechanical World
The incredible success of quantum theory as a mathematical model makes it especially frustrating that we cannot agree on a plausible philosophical or metaphysical description of it. Some philosophers of science have noticed certain parallels between quantum theory and the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, and these parallels are deepened and strengthened if the “observer” of modern physics is associated with the “intellect” of scholastic ontology. In this case we are talking about a human observer. But this type of observer has a unique quality that is not considered at all by either physics or scholastic philosophythe human observer is mimetic and therefore “interdividual.” By taking this fundamental anthropological fact into account, it turns out that the critical gaps still separating Aquinas from modern physicists can be effectively closed, reconciling the realism of Aquinas with the empirical evidence of quantum mechanics. This book explores this new bridge between the physical and the humana bridge essentially designed by scholastic theory, clarified by mimetic theory, and built by quantum theoryand the path it opens to that metaphysical understanding for which philosophers of modern science have been striving. It is an understanding, not merely of the physical but of physics in the fuller sense of what is real and what is true. Here the reader will find a physics that describes the natural world and our place as mimetic observers within it.
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Reflection in the Waves: The Interdividual Observer in a Quantum Mechanical World
242Reflection in the Waves: The Interdividual Observer in a Quantum Mechanical World
242Paperback(First Edition)
$19.95
19.95
In Stock
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781611862829 |
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Publisher: | Michigan State University Press |
Publication date: | 02/01/2019 |
Series: | Breakthroughs in Mimetic Theory |
Edition description: | First Edition |
Pages: | 242 |
Product dimensions: | 4.50(w) x 6.00(h) x 0.60(d) |
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