Observability, Anschaulichkeit and Abstraction: A Journey into Werner Heisenberg's Science and Philosophy

Jan Lacki

Jan Lacki

History and Philosophy of Science, Geneva University, 24, quai Ernest Ansermet, CH-1211 Geneve 4, Switzerland

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First published: 27 August 2002

Summary

Werner Heisenberg was one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century. He participated as a front rank actor in the shaping of a good part of XXth century physics and directly witnessed most of the intellectual struggles which led to what he called “Wandlungen in den Grundlagen der exakten Naturwissenschaft”. This expression is borrowed from one of the many talks and writings he devoted to the analysis of the scientific and philosophical implications of his, and his fellows physicists, findings. Indeed, Heisenberg's scientific activity increasingly reflected his more general intellectual views. This makes him another magnificent representative of a glorious linage going from the remote times of modern science to Einstein, Bohr and the like. This “philosophical” vein started early in his scientific life, and got stronger with time, prompted by the highly demanding scientific, but also social and political context of his mature years.

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