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Einstein, Tagore and the Nature of Reality (Hardcover)
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Einstein, Tagore and the Nature of Reality (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Studies in the Philosophy of Mathematics and Physics
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The nature of reality has been a long-debated issue among
scientists and philosophers. In 1930, Rabindranath Tagore and
Albert Einstein had a long conversation on the nature of reality.
This conversation has been widely quoted and discussed by
scientists, philosophers and scholars from the literary world. The
important question that Tagore and Einstein discussed was whether
the world is a unity dependent on humanity, or the world is a
reality independent on the human factor. Einstein took the stand
adopted by Western philosophers and mathematicians, namely that
reality is something independent of the mind and the human factor.
Tagore, on the other hand, adopted the opposite view. Nevertheless,
both Einstein and Tagore claimed to be realists despite the
fundamental differences between their conceptions of reality. Where
does the difference lie? Can it be harmonized at some deeper level?
Can Wittgenstein, for example, be a bridge between the two views?
This collection of essays explores these two fundamentally
different conceptions of the nature of reality from the
perspectives of theories of space-time, quantum theory, general
philosophy of science, cognitive science and mathematics.
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