Schrödinger's Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics | WorldCat.org
1: The Controversy between Schrödinger and the Göttingen-Copenhagen Physicists in the 1950's
1-1 Schrödinger's successive interpretations of quantum mechanics according to the current views
1-2 Born's and Heisenberg's criticism of Schrödinger's late interpretation of quantum mechanics
1-3 Historical flaws in the Born-Heisenberg critique of Schrödinger's late interpretation of quantum mechanics
1-4 Misunderstandings about the concept of particle
1-5 Misunderstandings about the concept of 'reality'
1-6 Misunderstandings about 'causality'
1-7 Schrödinger's over-revolutionary attitude
1-8 Modernity and post-modernity
1-9 The continuity of Schrödinger's attitude towards quantum mechanics (an outline)
2: Schrödinger's Theoretical Project
2-1 Reality and virtuality (1924)
2-2 Holism and wave-packets (1925)
2-3 Holism and the three dimensions of space (1926)
2-4 Wave interpretation versus electrodynamic interpretation: a prehistory of the empirical correspondence rules
2-5 The lack of pictures
2-6 The lack of continuity
3: The Analytical Stance
3-1 The ontological significance of the uncertainty relations
3-2 The state vector as a catalog of informations
4: Towards a New Ontology
4-1 The fading of the concept of particle
4-2 An ontology of state vectors
4-3 The 'blind spot' of quantum mechanics
4-4 Neo-Schrödingerian views on the measurement problem. I-Everett's interpretation
4-5 Neo-Schrödingerian views on the measurement problem II-Modal and critical interpretations
5: The 'Thing' of Everyday Life
5-1 The three features of objects
5-2 The aspects and the 'thing'
5-3 The 'elements' of the construction (Mach, Russell, Schrödinger, Husserl)
5-4 Are the 'basic data' really basic?
5-5 The construction of objects and the unconscious
5-6 The 'thing' and the future
5-7 Possibilities and infinities
5-8 The 'thing' as theory, and the theory as expectation
5-9 Realism and morals
5-10 Form and individuality
5-11 Wholeness and individuality
6: Complemetarity, Representation and Facts
6-1 Schrödinger's criticism of Bohr's complementarity
6-2 Bohr's complementarities
6-3 Schrödinger's 'complementarities'
6-4 Two parallelisms
6-5 Being-in-a-body and being-in-the-world
6-6 The body, the world, and dualism
6-7 The body, the world, and monism
6-8 The body, the world, and anomalous parallelism
Conclusion