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(1989) Synthese 79 (3).

Complementarity meets general relativity

a study in ontological commitments and theory unification

Alexander Rüger

pp. 559-580

The apparent underdetermination of the formalism of quantum field theory (QFT) as between a particle and a field interpretation is studied in this paper through a detour over the problem of unifying QFT with general relativity. All we have at present is a partial or approximate unification, QFT in non-Minkowskian spaces. The nature of this hybrid and the problem of its internal consistency are discussed. One of its most striking implications is that particles do not have an observer-independent existence. We trace the ways in which physicists reacted to this at first highly implausible ontological consequence. We conclude that quantum fields rather than particles are after all the basic entities in QFT.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/BF00869287

Full citation:

Rüger, A. (1989). Complementarity meets general relativity: a study in ontological commitments and theory unification. Synthese 79 (3), pp. 559-580.

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