Abstract

Some authors have proposed nondistributive logic as a way out of the difficulties usually met in trying to describe typical quantum phenomena (e.g. the double-slit experiment). We show, however, that, if one takes serously the wave-corpuscle dualism, which was after all the central fact around which quantum theory was developed, ordinary (distributive) logic can fully account for the empirical observations. We, furthermore, point out that there are unavoidable physical difficulties connected with the adoption of a nondistributive corpuscolar approach.

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