Location






The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224) and online.


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1 December (Friday) 4:15 PM  Room 224 + ONLINE
Márton Gömöri*
Carl Hoefer**
* Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös University Budapest
 Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest
** Department of Philosophy, University of Barcelona
 
Classicality and Bell's Theorem
A widespread view among physicists is that Bell’s theorem rests on an implicit assumption of “classicality,” in addition to locality. According to this understanding, the violation of Bell’s inequalities poses no challenge to locality, but simply reinforces the fact that quantum mechanics is not classical. The paper provides a critical analysis of this view. First we characterize the notion of classicality in probabilistic terms. We argue that classicality thus construed has nothing to do with the validity of classical physics, nor of classical probability theory, contrary to what many believe. At the same time, we show that the probabilistic notion of classicality is not an additional premise of Bell’s theorem, but a mathematical corollary of locality in conjunction with the standard auxiliary assumptions of Bell. Accordingly, any theory that claims to get around the derivation of Bell’s inequalities by giving up classicality, in fact has to give up one of those standard assumptions. As an illustration of this, we look at two recent interpretations of quantum mechanics, Reinhard Werner’s operational quantum mechanics and Robert Griffiths’ consistent histories approach, that are claimed to be local and non-classical, and identify which of the standard assumptions of Bell’s theorem each of them is forced to give up. We claim that while in operational quantum mechanics the Common Cause Principle is violated, the consistent histories approach is conspiratorial. Finally, we relate these two options to the idea of realism, a notion that is also often identified as an implicit assumption of Bell’s theorem.
Related paper: M. Gömöri and C. Hoefer, “Classicality and Bell's Theorem,” European Journal for Philosophy of Science 13, 45 (2023)


8 December (Friday) 4:15 PM  Room 224 + ONLINE
Valérie Lynn Therrien
Philosophy, McGill University, Montréal
 
The Evolution of Cantor's Proofs of the Non-Denumerability of .
The primary aim of this paper is to track the evolution of Cantor's proofs of the non-denumerability of ℝ -- which culminates in the famous diagonal argument and Cantor's Theorem. Why did Cantor revisit his proof three times? The secondary aim of this paper is to explore the heuristic role of arrays in his proof of the non-denumerability of ℝ. Why did Cantor return to the infinite array he had abandoned for his first two versions of the proof? I will conclude that Cantor likely had the means to arrive at the diagonal argument by 1878, but that the ways in which he had been using arrays up until then would have involved arbitrarily constructing an irrational number simply by manipulating numbers as if they were mere symbols. While this may seem natural to us now, this would not have been an acceptable way to construct an irrational number to his peers. Cantor's lengthy absence from public mathematics likely provided him with the time required to distill the essence of the diagonal argument, and to produce a proof that did not require the construction of an irrational number at all.