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Quantum language and the migration of scientific concepts

By: Burwell, Jennifer.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : London, England : MIT press , 2018Description: 328 pages ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9780262037556; 0262037556.Subject(s): Quantum theory -- Philosophy | Physics | Quantum theory in literature. -- science -- technology -- societyDDC classification: 530.120
Contents:
Experience, perception, and the limits of language -- The physics of visuality, intuition, and aesthetics -- Quantum paradigms in literary criticism -- New and Post-New Age appropriations -- Quantum versus nuclear discourse.
Summary: "This book looks at the use of language in science and in the circulation of scienctific concepts in society at large. More precisely, the book looks at the difficulties physicists faced regarding the use of language while creating quantum mechanics, with the use of quantum concepts in literary criticism and in literature, and with the use of these concepts by the New Age and Post New Age inclined. The principles of quantum physics--and the strange phenomena they describe--originate in and are expressed most precisely with highly abstract algebraic equations. The main challenge posed by quantum phenomena does not lie, however, in its mathematics; it lies instead in how these phenomena strain the limits of comprehension. This book explores the elusive nature of the quantum domain, its problematic relationship to representation in language, and its cultural migration over time"--
List(s) this item appears in: New 2018-19 (Fall to Summer)
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title.
Item type Current location Call number Status Date due
Non Fiction Non Fiction BardBerlinLibrary
2nd floor
530.120 BUR 2018 (Browse shelf) Available

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Experience, perception, and the limits of language -- The physics of visuality, intuition, and aesthetics -- Quantum paradigms in literary criticism -- New and Post-New Age appropriations -- Quantum versus nuclear discourse.

"This book looks at the use of language in science and in the circulation of scienctific concepts in society at large. More precisely, the book looks at the difficulties physicists faced regarding the use of language while creating quantum mechanics, with the use of quantum concepts in literary criticism and in literature, and with the use of these concepts by the New Age and Post New Age inclined. The principles of quantum physics--and the strange phenomena they describe--originate in and are expressed most precisely with highly abstract algebraic equations. The main challenge posed by quantum phenomena does not lie, however, in its mathematics; it lies instead in how these phenomena strain the limits of comprehension. This book explores the elusive nature of the quantum domain, its problematic relationship to representation in language, and its cultural migration over time"--

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