2004
DOI: 10.1093/bjps/55.4.645
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Are Gauge Symmetry Transformations Observable?

Abstract: In a recent paper in the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Kosso discussed the observational status of continuous symmetries of physics. While we are in broad agreement with his approach, we disagree with his analysis. In the discussion of the status of gauge symmetry, a set of examples offered by 't Hooft has influenced several philosophers, including Kosso; in all cases the interpretation of the examples is mistaken. In this paper we present our preferred approach to the empirical significance o… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(118 citation statements)
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“…This is in accordance with the "transformation condition" for symmetries having direct empirical significance suggested by Brading and Brown, which says that 'the transformation of a subsystem of the universe with respect to a reference system must yield an empirically distinguishable scenario' (Brading and Brown [2004] p. 646) for the whole universe.…”
Section: Greaves and Wallace On Interior Vs Non-interior Symmetriessupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…This is in accordance with the "transformation condition" for symmetries having direct empirical significance suggested by Brading and Brown, which says that 'the transformation of a subsystem of the universe with respect to a reference system must yield an empirically distinguishable scenario' (Brading and Brown [2004] p. 646) for the whole universe.…”
Section: Greaves and Wallace On Interior Vs Non-interior Symmetriessupporting
confidence: 85%
“…If one accepts this perspective yet wants to maintain a nontrivial distinction between symmetries with and without direct empirical significance, one will therefore expect this distinction to hold between symmetries operating between the states of subsystems of the universe itself. 5 The idea to focus on subsystem symmetries to elucidate matters of direct empirical significance is suggested already in (Brown and Sypel [1995]), taken up in (Kosso [2000]; Brading and Brown [2004]; Greaves and Wallace [forthcoming]), and adopted in the present paper as well. It goes well with the fact that in examples such as Galileo's ship the symmetries in question are in fact subsystem symmetries: in the case of Galileo's ship it is only the cabin of the ship, not the surrounding ocean, which is represented by a symmetry transformed state in the situation where the ship is moving as compared to where it is at rest.…”
Section: Greaves and Wallace On Interior Vs Non-interior Symmetriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Gauge symmetries in YM theories are peculiar. They do not have direct empirical significance (Brading & Brown, 2004). They imply indeterminism at a classical level (Earman, 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Nicholas Teh (2015) has recently argued that according to this criterion there exist interesting analogies to the Galileo ship scenario in the gauge theories that underlie modern elementary particle physics. He takes his analysis to partly vindicates an earlier claim by Greaves and Wallace according to which some of the "local" gauge symmetries in gauge theories have direct empirical significance (Greaves and Wallace 2014), contrary to the claims made by other philosophers (Kosso 2000, Redhead 2002, Brading and Brown 2004, Lyre 2004, Healey 2009). Greaves and Wallace argue that the local gauge symmetries with direct empirical significance are those that do not reduce to the identity transformation on the subsystem boundary.…”
Section: Symmetries and Physical Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%