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Bibliographic Information

The creation of quantum mechanics and the Bohr-Pauli dialogue

John Hendry

(Studies in the history of modern science, v. 14)

D. Reidel , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1984

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Note

Bibliography: p. 166-173

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Many books have been written on the history of quantum mechanics. So far as I am aware, however, this is the first to incorporate the results of the large amount of detailed scholarly research completed by professional historians of physics over the past fifteen years. It is also, I believe, the first since Max Jammer's pioneering study of fifteen years ago to attempt a genuine 'history' as opposed to a mere technical report or popular or semi-popular account. My aims in making this attempt have been to satisfy the needs of historians of science and, more especially, to promote a serious interest in the history of science among phYSicists and physics students. Since the creation of quantum mechanics was inevitably a technical process conducted through the medium of technical language it has been impossible to avoid the introduction of a large amount of such language. Some acquaintance with quantum mechanics, corresponding to that obtained through an undergraduate physics course, has accordingly been assumed. I have tried to ensure, however, that such an acquaintance should be sufficient as well as necessary, and even someone with only the most basic grounding in physics should be able with judicious skip ping, to get through the book. The technical details are essential to the dialogue, but the plot proceeds and can, I hope, be understood on a non technical level.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction.- 2. Wolfgang Pauli and the Search for a Unified Theory.- 3. Niels Bohr and the Problems of Atomic Theory.- 4. The Technical Problem Complex.- 5. From Bohr's Virtual Oscillators to the New Kinematics of Heisenberg and Pauli.- 6. The New Kinematics and Its Exploration.- 7. Wave Mechanics and the Problem of Interpretation.- 8. Transformation Theory and the Development of the Probabilistic Interpretation.- 9. The Uncertainty Principle and the Copenhagen Interpretation.- 10. Concluding Remarks.- Notes.- Select Bibliography.

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