Table of Contents
General Introduction
Part I: Understanding Bohr's Philosophical Background
1. Why Do We Find Bohr Obscure? Reading Bohr as a Philosopher of Experiment Kristian Camilleri (History and Philosophy of Science Department, University of Melbourbane)
2. On Bohr's Transcendental Research Program Michel Bitbol (Director of Research, CNRS, Paris)
3. Transcendental Versus Quantitative Meanings of Bohr's Complementarity Principle Patricia Kauark-Leite (Philosophy Department, The Federal University of Minas Gerais)
4. Complementarity and Pragmatic Epistemology: A Comparison of Bohr and C.I.
Lewis Henry Folse (Professor of Philosophy, Loyola University)
5. Complementarity and Human Nature Jan Faye (Associate Professor, University of Copenhagen)
6. Bohr's Relational Holism and the Classical-quantum Interaction Mauro Dorato (Professor of Philosophy, University of Rome)
7. Complementarity As a Route to Inferentialism Stefano Osnaghi (ICI Berlin Institute for Cultural Inquiry)
8. Bohr's Thought from the Twentieth to the Twenty-First Century Arkady Plotnitsky (Professor of English, Theory and Cultural Studies, Purdue University)
Part II: Bohr's interpretation of quantum mechanics in twenty-first century physics
9. Complementarity and Quantum Tunneling Slobodan Perovic (Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Belgrade)
10. Bohr and the Problem of the Quantum-to-Classical Transition Maximillian Schlosshauer & Kristian Camilleri (Department of Physics, University of Portland)
11. Bohr's epistemological contribution to the quantum-classical cut problems Manuel Bächtold (Philosophy of Science, Université Montpellier)
12. An Exploration of the History and Possible Future of Bohrian Quantum Empiricism Scott Tanona (Associate Professor of Philosophy, Kansas State University)
13. An Everett Perspective on Bohr and EPR Guido Bacciagaluppi (Associate Professor of Foundation of Physics, Utrecht University)
14. Niels Bohr and the Mathematical Formalism Dennis Dieks (Professor of Physics, Utrecht University)
15. From Classical Concepts to Commutative Algebras Klaas Landsman (Professor of Physics, Radboud University)
16. Why QBism Is Not the Copenhagen Interpretation and What John Bell Might Have Thought of It N. David Mermin (Professor of Physics, Cornell University)