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Niels Bohr's complementarity
its structure, history, and intersections with hermeneutics and deconstruction
Abstract
This book explores the modern physicist Niels Bohr's philosophical thought, specifically his pivotal idea of complementarity, with a focus on the relation between the roles of what he metaphorically calls 'spectators' and "actors." It seeks to spell out the structural and historical complexity of the idea of complementarity in terms of different modes of the 'spectator-actor" relation, showing, in particular, that the reorganization of Bohr's thought starting from his 1935 debate with Einstein and his collaborators is characterized by an extension of the dynamic conception of complementarity from non-physical contexts to the very field of quantum theory. Further, linked with this analysis, the book situates Bohr's complementarity in contemporary philosophical context by examining its intersections with post-Heideggerian hermeneutics as well as Derridean deconstruction. Specifically, it points to both the close affinities and the differences between Bohr's idea of the "actor-spectator" relation and the hermeneutic notion of the relation between "belonging" and "distanciation."
Details | Table of Contents
a brief review
pp.1-10
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1748-0_1Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Dordrecht
Year: 2011
Pages: 176
Series: Boston studies in the philosophy of science
Series volume: 286
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-1748-0
ISBN (hardback): 978-94-007-1747-3
ISBN (digital): 978-94-007-1748-0
Full citation:
Katsumori Makoto (2011) Niels Bohr's complementarity: its structure, history, and intersections with hermeneutics and deconstruction. Dordrecht, Springer.