I-Phi Books
Free Will: The Scandal in Philosophy was published in June 2011.
480 pages, 40 figures, 15 sidebars, bibliography, glossary, index.
Philosophers who want to review it can download a PDF or a reflowable eBook, with hyperlinked index.
PDFs of the individual chapters are here.
Great Problems in Philosophy and Physics Solved? was published in September 2016
472 pages, 45 figures, bibliography, index.
Philosophers who want to review it can download a PDF or a fixed layout eBook or a reflowable eBook, all with hyperlinked indexes.
PDFs of the individual chapters are here.
Metaphysics: Problems, Paradoxes, and Puzzles Solved? was published in December 2016
428 pages, 13 figures, bibliography, index.
Philosophers who want to review it can download a PDF or a fixed layout eBook or a reflowable eBook, all with hyperlinked indexes.
PDFs of the individual chapters are here.
My God, He Plays Dice! How Albert Einstein Invented Most of Quantum Mechanics, was published in March, 2019
452 pages, 71 figures, bibliography, index.
PDFs of the draft chapters are here.
My fifth book I did not write. I was an editor for
David Layzer's book on free will. I did co-write a preface and afterword for it.
Why We are Free was published in March, 2021
168 pages pages, 4 figures, bibliography, index.
An interactive PDF of the book is here.
Paperback and Kindle versions are here.
My Books on Amazon
To request a hard copy for review of one of these titles, send an email with your philosophy department mailing address to
bobdoyle@informationphilosopher.com.
In Preparation
I am currently working on three books. Two are based on I-Phi drop-down menus.
One is
Mind: The Experience Recorder and Reproducer.
The other is
Quantum: The Scandal in Physics.
The third book is my attempt to explain Einstein's "Spooky Action-at-a-Distance."
The title is
Disentangling Entanglement.
The work in progress is
online here. I posted a
PDF of the current draft text here.
Comments and suggestions will be most appreciated.
It may seem presumptuous of me to think I can "explain" the puzzle of entanglement when perhaps the greatest of all quantum physicists
Richard Feynman famously said "nobody understands quantum mechanics!" So please read my suggestion of exactly what Feynman might have told us is not explainable in what he called "
the only mystery>" in QM.
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