The fundamental importance of discourse in theoretical physics
Philip V. Fellman, Jonathan Vos Post, Christine M. Carmichael

TL;DR
This paper argues that the conceptual framework and language of discourse fundamentally shape the perceived limits of physics, analyzing issues like time, non-locality, and maximality in cosmology and quantum mechanics.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of discourse structure in understanding key problems in physics, offering a philosophical perspective on physical limits.
Findings
Discourse influences the interpretation of time in physics
Language affects understanding of non-locality in quantum mechanics
Conceptual frameworks impact theories of cosmic inflation
Abstract
The purpose of the following paper is to demonstrate that the "limits of physics" are in a very important way determined by the conceptual framework and language of discourse that we use to describe physical reality. In this paper we examine three areas where the structure of discourse has been particularly difficult. In this regard we examine three problems, the problem of time (which is discussed in two sections of the paper), the problem of non-locality in quantum mechanics and some related general difficulties of interpretation specific to the Copenhagen school, and the concept of maximality as it is employed with respect to cosmic inflation in general relativity and quantum cosmology.
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhilosophy and History of Science · Origins and Evolution of Life · Cognitive Science and Education Research
