"I had never met Bell, nor heard him lecture, but in my reading of his scientific papers I have developed a great admiration for him and his work. I have especially admired his attempts to dismantle the orthodox Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory, written with such tremendous style and obvious enjoyment. Although in this book I have tried to present a balanced account - arguing one way and then another - I hope that I have done justice to Bell's superbly constructed criticisms. The debate over the meaning of quantum theory will certainly be poorer without him."
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CosmologistsPeople from BelfastAcademics from Northern IrelandStanford University facultyPhysicists from Northern Ireland
Original Language: English
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Sources
Jim Baggott, The Meaning of Quantum Theory (1992), Preface
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Stewart_Bell
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John Stewart Bell
John Stewart Bell (June 28 1928 – October 10 1990) was an Irish physicist who worked in the field of particle physics at CERN, and who developed one of the most important theorems of quantum physics, Bell's Theorem.
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