
The Physics of Ignorance
Representation, Realism, and the Renormalization Group
Laura Ruetsche(Author)
Oxford University Press
Will be published approx. on 15. September 2026
Book
Hardback
416 pages
978-0-19-289400-7 (ISBN)
Description
Our very best physical theories are both profoundly successful and deeply mysterious. They are not mathematically well-behaved, yet they underwrite predictions of surprising phenomena that are accurate to one part in a trillion. Notwithstanding their empirical triumphs, these theories are widely held to be 'merely effective': rather than the fundamental truth about physical reality, they yield excellent approximations to its implications in the limited domains we can access using present technologies. These enigmatic theories seem to be telling us something about the universe--but what? What, in spite of our ignorance of the exact contours of a final theory of physics, does the success of our best (present, imperfect) theories of physics license us to believe about the physical universe?
The Physics of Ignorance is an extended investigation of this question. Laura Ruetsche focuses on theories of critical phenomena and the interacting quantum field theories making up the Standard Model of modern particle physics, as well as on a family of techniques (known as renormalization group approaches) for deriving secure lessons from hierarchies of incomplete theories. Ruetsche's exposition aims to make salient aspects of the physics and mathematics it covers accessible to a philosophical audience. Assessing the roles and signatures of ignorance in the past, present, and probable future of physics, the book argues for a new position in the scientific realism debate: Hermeneutic Empiricism, which advocates efforts to interpret theories literally but counsels against believing those theories wholesale, and also against trusting their efficacy to persist.
The Physics of Ignorance is an extended investigation of this question. Laura Ruetsche focuses on theories of critical phenomena and the interacting quantum field theories making up the Standard Model of modern particle physics, as well as on a family of techniques (known as renormalization group approaches) for deriving secure lessons from hierarchies of incomplete theories. Ruetsche's exposition aims to make salient aspects of the physics and mathematics it covers accessible to a philosophical audience. Assessing the roles and signatures of ignorance in the past, present, and probable future of physics, the book argues for a new position in the scientific realism debate: Hermeneutic Empiricism, which advocates efforts to interpret theories literally but counsels against believing those theories wholesale, and also against trusting their efficacy to persist.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-289400-7 (9780192894007)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
As a Carleton College undergraduate, Laura Ruetsche studied physics, philosophy, and classical Greek. As a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, she wrote an BPhil thesis on Plato's Timeaus. She completed a PhD at the University of Pittsburgh, whose faculty she joined in 1996. In 2008, she moved to the University of Michigan, where she is Louis E. Loeb Collegiate Professor of Philosophy. Her honours include a Lakatos Award for her 2011 Interpreting Quantum Theories (OUP) and election to American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2022. Her interests include feminist and critical approaches to science and its epistemology.
Author
Louis E. Loeb Collegiate Professor of PhilosophyLouis E. Loeb Collegiate Professor of Philosophy, University of Michigan