Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- Photographs of the Symposium
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Mathematical Notation
- Part One Introduction
- Part Two Quarks and Leptons
- Part Three Toward Gauge Theories
- Part Four Accelerators, Detectors, and Laboratories
- Part Five Electroweak Unification
- Part Six The Discovery of Quarks and Gluons
- Part Seven Personal Overviews
- 35 Quarks, Color, and QCD
- 36 The Philosopher Problem
- 37 Should We Believe in Quarks and QCD?
- 38 A Historical Perspective on the Rise of the Standard Model
- Index
36 - The Philosopher Problem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- Photographs of the Symposium
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Mathematical Notation
- Part One Introduction
- Part Two Quarks and Leptons
- Part Three Toward Gauge Theories
- Part Four Accelerators, Detectors, and Laboratories
- Part Five Electroweak Unification
- Part Six The Discovery of Quarks and Gluons
- Part Seven Personal Overviews
- 35 Quarks, Color, and QCD
- 36 The Philosopher Problem
- 37 Should We Believe in Quarks and QCD?
- 38 A Historical Perspective on the Rise of the Standard Model
- Index
Summary
Professor Murray Gell-Mann told us how, in 1963, in a submission to Physics Letters, he “employed the term ‘mathematical’ for quarks that would not emerge singly and ‘real’ for quarks that would.” Three years later he offered an improved “characterization of mathematical quarks by describing them in terms of the limit of an infinite potential, essentially the way confinement is regarded today. Thus what I meant by ‘mathematical’ for quarks is what is now generally thought to be both true and predicted by QCD.” But in using the term “mathematical” Professor Gell-Mann got himself into some hot water, for “up to the present, numerous authors keep stating or implying that when I wrote that quarks were likely to be ‘mathematical’ and unlikely to be ‘real,’ I meant that they somehow weren't there. Of course, I meant nothing of the kind.”
How did Gell-Mann get himself into this little predicament? “I did not want to call [confined] quarks ‘real’ because I wanted to avoid painful arguments with philosophers about the reality of permanently confined objects. In view of the widespread misunderstanding of my carefully explained notation, I should probably have ignored the philosopher problem and used different words.”
At the conference Gell-Mann told us about the doctor's prescription he kept posted in his office admonishing him not to debate philosophers, suggesting that his choice of the word “mathematical” was his effort to follow the prescription.
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- Information
- The Rise of the Standard ModelA History of Particle Physics from 1964 to 1979, pp. 634 - 636Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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