Areas of interest
Philosophy of physics, philosophy of science, applicability of mathematics, analogies, history of physics (especially 17th,19th and 20th Centuries)
Areas of graduate supervision
- History and Philosophy of Science
- Foundationsof Quantum Theory
- Epistemology
- Philosophy of Mathematics

Current Research
Much of my current research is centered around the role that appliedmathematics and analogical reasoning have played in quantum field theory.From the application of Fock space representations and Feynman diagramtechniques to spontaneous symmetry breaking to renormalization group methods,
many breakthroughs in twentieth century physics are traceable to mathematicalformalisms being traded back and forth between particle physics and condensedmatter physics. In recent publications I have argued that purely formalanalogies were behind some of these successes. I am writing a book (undercontract with OUP) that traces the implications for scientific realism,explanation, and the interpretation of quantum field theory, and advances newaccounts of applied mathematics and analogical reasoning.
I am the PI on the SSHRC Insight Grant-funded project "How Mid-LevelTheoretical Frameworks Are Used to Develop New Theories in Physics."Mid-level frameworks such as analytical mechanics or the spontaneous symmetrybreaking paradigm are neither entirely abstract (e.g., pure mathematics) nor
entirely concrete (e.g., a model for a particular type of system, such as apulley or the Higgs boson). The ultimate goals of this project are to glean
methodological lessons about how to successfully employ mid-level frameworksand to apply these methodological lessons to current programs for formulatingnew theories of quantum gravity and particle physics.
Selected publications
- “The development of renormalization group methods for particle physics: Formal analogies between classical statistical mechanics and quantum field theory,” Synthese, in press. []
- (with Adam Koberinski) “The Higgs mechanism and superconductivity: A case study of formal analogies,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 55 (2016): 72-91.
- “The fate of ‘particles’ in quantum field theories with interactions,” Studies in the History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 39 (2008): 841-859.
Affiliations
- Affiliate Member, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, ݮƵ
- Member, Rotman Institute of Philosophy, University of Western Ontario
Selected supervisions
M.A. theses
- The Role of Concrete Models in the Revolution in Superconductivity
- Quantum Field Theory: Motivating the Axiom of Causality
- A Realist Critique of Structural Empiricism
Contact information
dlfraser@uwaterloo.ca
519-888-4567 x42780