Wednesday, September 02, 2015

GIACINTO PLESCIA Valia Allori

 



Valia Allori

Valia
Allori
Associate Professor of Philosophy, Northern Illinois University
Zulaf
Hall 913, Dekalb, 60115 IL
E-mail:
vallori@niu.edu 
Webpage:
http://www.niu.edu/~vallori/



Research
Interests: Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Physics, Metaphysics


Special
Interest: 
Bohmian
Mechanics



Overview: 
Valia
Allori has studied physics and philosophy first in Italy, her home
country, and then in the United States. She has worked in the
foundations of quantum mechanics, in particular in the framework of
Bohmian mechanics, a quantum theory without observers. Her main
concern has always been to understand what the world is really like,
and how we can use our best physical theory to answer such general
metaphysical questions. In her physics doctoral dissertation, she
discussed the classical limit of quantum mechanics, to analyze the
connections between the quantum and the classical theories. What does
it mean that a theory, in a certain approximation, reduces to
another? Is the classical explanation of macroscopic phenomena
essentially different from the one provided by quantum mechanics? In
her philosophy doctoral dissertation she turned to more general
questions that involve the structure of fundamental physical
theories, the metaphysical status and the epistemological role of the
theoretical entities used in these theories. Do all fundamental
physical theories have the very same structure, contrarily to what
one might think? If so, what is this telling us about the nature of
explanation? She has worked mainly in collaboration with Detlef
Duerr, Sheldon Goldstein, Roderich Tumulka and Nino Zanghi in Bohmian
mechanics, writing several articles with them. She is also co-author
of a book on the philosophy and foundations of physics, written in
Italian, together with Mauro Dorato, Federico Laudisa and Nino
Zanghi. The book, "La Natura delle Cose" ("The Nature
of Things"), has been written for a philosophy or a physics
student who is interested in the main problems of the theory of
relativity, statistical mechanics, quantum theory and causation, but
it might be accessible, even if with some effort, by an interested
reader.



Curriculum
vitae
 


Education
  • Ph.
    D., Philosophy, Rutgers University, Fall 2007 (defense date: May 14,
    2007).

  • Ph.
    D., Physics, University of Genova (Italy), Fall 2001 (defense date
    December 5, 2001).


    • Thesis
      Title: "Decoherence and the Classical Limit
      of Quantum Mechanics
      ."


    • Supervisor:
      Nino Zanghi (Physics Department, University of Genova, Italy).
      Committee: Detlef Duerr (Mathematics Department, University of
      Munich, Germany), Lodovico Lanz (Physics Department, University of
      Milano, Italy).


  • Certificate
    in Scientific Communication, University of Milano (Italy), Fall
    1999.

  • Laurea
    (M.A.), Physics (Summa cum laude), University of Milano
    (Italy), Spring 1997 (defense date: March 26 1997).



Area
of Specialization


  • Philosophy
    of Physics, Philosophy of Science, Metaphysics.


Area of
Competence


  • Logic.


Publications
(Philosophy)



Books


Articles and Book Chapters




Book Reviews



Publications
(Physics)

Articles/Book
Chapters/ Conferences Proceedings






Conferences
and Talks



Interviews


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