Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ufba.br/handle/ri/6343
metadata.dc.type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Philosophy enters the optics laboratory: Bell's theorem and its first experimental tests (1965–1982)
Other Titles: Studies In History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies In History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
Authors: Freire Junior, Olival
metadata.dc.creator: Freire Junior, Olival
Abstract: This paper deals with the ways that the issue of completing quantum mechanics was brought into laboratories and became a topic in mainstream quantum optics. It focuses on the period between 1965, when Bell published what we now call Bell's theorem, and 1982, when Aspect published the results of his experiments. Discussing some of those past contexts and practices, I show that factors in addition to theoretical innovations, experiments, and techniques were necessary for the flourishing of this subject, and that the experimental implications of Bell's theorem were neither suddenly recognized nor quickly highly regarded by physicists. Indeed, I will argue that what was considered good physics after Aspect's 1982 experiments was once considered by many a philosophical matter instead of a scientific one, and that the path from philosophy to physics required a change in the physics community's attitude about the status of the foundations of quantum mechanics.
Keywords: History of physics
Quantum physics
Bell's theorem
Entanglement
Hidden-variables
Scientific controversies
Publisher: Studies In History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies In History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/6343
Issue Date: 2006
Appears in Collections:Artigo Publicado em Periódico (FIS)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
CC.pdf374,57 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.