In the twelve years since this book was written, no ideas have emerged that are revolutionary enough to change the general outlook of quantum mechanics. The book still covers the hard core of the conceptual advances produced by quantum physics and the problems raised by them.
In particular, the recent developments do not overthrow the most general conclusions that emerge from the present book, namely that multitudinism (materialistic atomism) is dead, that separability cannot be kept as a feature pertaining to (independent) reality and that indeed, science is presumably not in itself a sufficient tool for gaining full access to that reality, although it brilliantly accounts for the relationships between observed phenomena. These points are argued at various places in the book. The first two should be considered by now to be true beyond any reasonable doubt and I firmly believe that the third is also well established.
Part 1 Elements of Quantum Mechanics
Part 2 Density Matrices and Mixtures
Part 3 Quantum Nonseparability
Part 4 Measurement Theories
Part 5 Knowledge and The Physical World
Part 6 Summary and Outlook