Preface vi
1 What is Spatiotemporal Locality? 1
1 The Big Picture 1
2 Causal Relations between Events 3
3 Action by Contact 7
4 Spatial, Temporal, and Spatiotemporal Locality Defined 13
5 Intrinsic Properties and Noncausal Connections 17
Discussion Questions 23
Notes 24
2 Fields to the Rescue? 26
1 The Electric Force 26
2 The Electric Field and its Possible Interpretations 32
3 Potentials 42
4 Lines of Force 47
Discussion Questions 61
Notes 65
3 Dispositions and Causes 67
1 Introduction 67
2 Dispositions, Categorical Bases, and Subjunctive Conditionals 71
3 Are the Categorical Bases in Themselves Unknowable? 79
Discussion Questions 90
Notes 92
4 Locality and Scientific Explanation 94
1 Is Action at a Distance Impossible? 94
2 Brute Facts and Ultimate Explanations 95
3 Which Facts are Brute? 100
Discussion Questions 107
Notes 110
5 Fields, Energy, and Momentum 111
1 Introduction 111
2 The Argument from Conserved Quantities 112
3 Why Energy’s Ontological Status Matters 120
4 Energy in Classical Physics 125
5 Energy in the Fields 131
6 Energy Flow and the Poynting Vector 136
7 A Moral Regarding the Testability of Theories 153
Discussion Questions 157
Notes 162
6 Is there Nothing but Fields? 165
1 Is Electric Charge Real? 165
2 Faraday’s Picture 167
Discussion Questions 171
Notes 173
7 Relativity and the Unification of Electricity and Magnetism 175
1 Unification in Physics 175
2 How Relativity Unifies Electricity and Magnetism 180
3 Einstein’s Argument from Asymmetry 186
4 The Interdependence of Philosophy and Physics 199
Discussion Questions 201
Notes 203
8 Relativity, Energy, Mass, and the Reality of Fields 205
1 Classical Physics and the “Relativity of Motion” 206
2 Relativistic Invariants and the Unification that Relativity Achieves: Space and Time 210
3 Relativistic Invariants and the Unification that Relativity Achieves: Energy and Momentum 221
4 Mass and the Meaning of “e = mc2 ” 224
5 Fields – At Last! 240
6 Erasing the Line between Scientific Theory and its Philosophical Interpretation 249
Discussion Questions 250
Notes 252
9 Quantum Metaphysics 255
1 Is Quantum Mechanics Complete? 255
2 The Bell Inequalities 263
3 For Whom the Bell Tolls 271
4 Wrestling with Nonlocality 280
Discussion Questions 298
Notes 300
Final Exam 302
References 305
Index 316
Marc Lange is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Washington. He is author of Natural Laws in Scientific Practice (2000).
"Marc Lange uses the philosophical tools of traditional metaphysics
to analyze examples drawn from electromagnetic theory and quantum
mechanics and in turn uses these examples to refine some of the
basic concepts of traditional metaphysics. The result is an
excellent introduction to the best sort of metaphysics, the sort
that is informed by our best physical theories." Jeffrey Barrett,
University of California, Irvine
"This is philosophy of physics that meets even Feynman's challenge
of making a difference for physics while it attains Hempel's
standards of clarity. I can hardly imagine teaching the philosophy
of physics, at any level, from introductory to graduate seminar,
without using this book!" Alex Rosenberg, Duke University
"Eschewing the technical jargon of philosophy of science, though he
is a fluent contributor to journals and refers to current issues in
appropriate notes, Lange employs a breezy, common language style,
complete with discussion questions suitable for an undergraduate
introductory class. [...] Highly recommended to philosphically
inexperienced physicists as well as current students in philosophy
of science. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." P.D.
Skiff, Bard College, Choice, January 2003
"An accomplished philosopher of science, Lange introduces the
epistemological consequences of a central idea in physics -
locality ... Eschewing the technical jargon of philosophy of
science, though he is a fluent contributor to journals and feres to
current issues in appropriate notes, Lange employs a breezy, commom
language style, complete with discussion questions suitable for an
undergraduate introductory class ... his introduction to the issues
via concrete example is very effective and unique. Highly
recommended to philosophically inexperienced physicists as well as
current students in philosophy of science." Choice
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