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  • Jeremy Butterfield (1996). Whither the Minds? British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (2):200-20.
    Consciousness and the Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Cognitive Science
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  • 73.7Michael Lockwood (1996). Many-Minds Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (2):159-88.
    Consciousness and the Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Cognitive Science
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  • 71.3David Deutsch, Comment on 'Many Minds' Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics by Michael Lockwood”.
    At the philosophical foundations of our best and deepest theory of the structure of reality, namely quantum mechanics, there is an intellectual scandal that reflects badly on most of this century’s leading physicists and philosophers of physics. One way of making the nature of the scandal plain is simply to observe that this paper [1] by Lockwood is untainted by it. Lockwood gives us an up to date investigation of metaphysics, and discusses the implications of quantum theory for some of (...) the bread and butter concepts of philosophy, such as reality, the self and causality. The scandal is that there is very little other work of that description in the literature, and what little there is, is systematically disregarded by mainstream thinking in both philosophy and physics. Despite the unrivalled empirical success of quantum theory, the very suggestion that it may be literally true as a description of nature is still greeted with cynicism, incomprehension and even anger. (shrink)
    Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Physical Science
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  • 64.3Meir Hemmo & Itamar Pitowsky (2003). Probability and Nonlocality in Many Minds Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 54 (2).
    We argue that certain types of many minds (and many worlds) interpretations of quantum mechanics, e.g. Lockwood ([1996a]), Deutsch ([1985]) do not provide a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilistic algorithm. By contrast, in Albert and Loewer's ([1988]) version of the many minds interpretation, there is a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilities. We consider Albert and Loewer's probability interpretation in the context of Bell-type and GHZ-type states and argue that it implies a certain (weak) form of nonlocality. (...) 1 Introduction 2 Albert and Loewer's interpretation 3 Probabilities in Lockwood's interpretation 4 Sets of minds and their correlations 5 Many minds and GHZ. (shrink)
    Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Physical Science
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  • 61.9Itamar Pitowsky, Probability and Nonlocality in Many Minds Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics.
    We argue that a certain type of many minds (and many worlds) interpretations of quantum mechanics, e. g. Lockwood ([1996a]), Deutsch ([1985]) do not provide a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilistic algorithm. By contrast, in Albert and Loewer’s ([1988]) version of the many minds interpretation there is a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilities. We consider Albert and Loewer’s probability interpretation in the context of Bell-type and GHZ-type states and argue that it..
    Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Physical Science
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  • 61.8Michael Lockwood (1996). 'Many Minds' Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics: Replies to Replies. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (3):445-461.
    Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Physical Science
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  • 60.6Meir Hemmo & Itamar Pitowsky, Probability and Nonlocality in Many Minds Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics.
    We argue that a certain type of many minds (and many worlds) interpretations of quantum mechanics, e.g. Lockwood ([1996a]), Deutsch ([1985]) do not provide a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilistic algorithm. By contrast, in Albert and Loewer's ([1988]) version of the many minds interpretation there is a coherent interpretation of the quantum mechanical probabilities. We consider Albert and Loewer's probability interpretation in the context of Bell-type and GHZ-type states and argue that it implies a certain (weak) form of (...) nonlocality. (shrink)
    Quantum Mechanics in Philosophy of Physical Science
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