RT Article T1 Quantum Theology Beyond Copenhagen: Taking Fundamentalism Literally JF Zygon VO 58 IS 1 SP 183 OP 202 A1 Harris, Mark 1966- LA English YR 2023 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1840914432 AB Theological engagement with quantum physics has, to this day, been dominated by the Copenhagen interpretation. However, philosophers and physicists working in the “quantum foundations” field have largely abandoned the Copenhagen view on account of what is widely seen as its troublesome antirealism. Other metaphysical approaches have come to the fore instead, which often take a strongly realist flavor, such as de Broglie-Bohm, or Everett's “Many-Worlds” interpretation. In the spirit of recent quantum foundations work, this article introduces a collection of studies aimed at taking quantum theology “beyond Copenhagen.” The present article advocates a commitment to “quantum fundamentalism,” which could resolve some of the enduring ontological problems faced by existing theological work with quantum mechanics, especially in discussions of quantum special divine action. Taking quantum fundamentalism literally would mean a departure from the Copenhagen interpretation, and the article suggests the need for a new research program to lay the groundwork in the natural theology of quantum foundations. K1 special divine action K1 quantum theology K1 quantum ontology K1 quantum fundamentalism K1 Natural Theology K1 Instrumentalism K1 Copenhagen interpretation DO 10.1111/zygo.12869