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Many, perhaps most textbooks of quantum mechanics present a
Copenhagen, single system angle; fewer present the subject matter
as an instrument for treating ensembles, but the two methods have
been silently coexisting since the mid-Thirties. This lingering
dichotomy of purpose for a major physical discipline has much
shrouded further insights into the foundations of quantum theory.
Quantum Reprogramming resolves this long-standing dichotomy by
examining the mutual relation between single systems and ensembles,
assigning each its own tools for treating the subject at hand:
i.e., Schrodinger-Dirac methods for ensembles versus period
integrals for single systems. A unified treatment of integer and
fractional quantum Hall effects and a finite description of the
electron's anomalies are mentioned as measures of justification for
the chosen procedure of resolving an old-time dichotomy. The
methods of presentation are, in part, elementary, with repetitive
references needed to delineate differences with respect to standard
methods. The parts on period integrals are developed with a
perspective on elementary methods in physics, thus leading up to
some standard results of de Rham theory and algebraic topology.
Audience: Students of physics, mathematics, philosophers as well as
outsiders with a general interest in the conceptual development of
physics will find useful reading in these pages, which will
stimulate further inquiry and study. "
Many, perhaps most textbooks of quantum mechanics present a
Copenhagen, single system angle; fewer present the subject matter
as an instrument for treating ensembles, but the two methods have
been silently coexisting since the mid-Thirties. This lingering
dichotomy of purpose for a major physical discipline has much
shrouded further insights into the foundations of quantum theory.
Quantum Reprogramming resolves this long-standing dichotomy by
examining the mutual relation between single systems and ensembles,
assigning each its own tools for treating the subject at hand:
i.e., Schrodinger-Dirac methods for ensembles versus period
integrals for single systems. A unified treatment of integer and
fractional quantum Hall effects and a finite description of the
electron's anomalies are mentioned as measures of justification for
the chosen procedure of resolving an old-time dichotomy. The
methods of presentation are, in part, elementary, with repetitive
references needed to delineate differences with respect to standard
methods. The parts on period integrals are developed with a
perspective on elementary methods in physics, thus leading up to
some standard results of de Rham theory and algebraic topology.
Audience: Students of physics, mathematics, philosophers as well as
outsiders with a general interest in the conceptual development of
physics will find useful reading in these pages, which will
stimulate further inquiry and study. "
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