Interesting. Any experiments you can cite? Or thought-experiments currently entertained in scientific papers or books by physicists? — 180 Proof
How does "panpsychism" not beg the question it's designed to answer, namely, the what in the first place – fundamentally – gives rise to "psyche" (i.e. consciousness, sentience, experience, awareness, etc)?
And is this speculation about nature even testable in any corroborable way? — 180 Proof
If everything is mind, what's the mechanism by which it manifests illusions to fool its individual selves that, say, there is more-than-mind (e.g. mass, light, spacetime)? — 180 Proof
I use the word "soul" in a context that only mathematicians can understand. It means not only superficial comprehension but deeper context, what lies beneath even the proof of the theory, a feeling of the actual substance of the concept. I would not be surprised if future development of quantum theory might arise from going to the soul of the math that seems to predict so well. If so, philosophers may be chipping away at pretty hard marble. — jgill
I don't see why the presence of 2 types of stuff underpinning reality is such a problem. Where is the conceptual difficulty in imagining two types of material underpinning the universe, and them interacting with each other? Why does that have to become two aspects of the same stuff? — Gary Enfield
instead of imagining that particles miraculaously turn into waves, and then back again to form a dot on a detector, why not accept the simpler option of a hidden pool of stuff that is causing the wave which the particles ride? — Gary Enfield
The reason why I don't think that an electromagnetic field generated by the equipment would explain the effect is because the original experiment conducted by Thomas Young in the early 1800s used candles, not lasers. — Gary Enfield
It is easy to imagine a stream of wavicles interfering as they diffract through the slits to produce an array of light and dark bands on the florescent screen corresponding to in phase and out of phase waves. This would resemble the classic experiment performed in the 19th century (nonelectronic context), where a beam of light was diffracted by a single aperture to then pass through double slits as a spreading field which apparently interfered with itself and produced a similar result.
Interference patterns from one at a time particle emission (the modern electronic emitter context) are a thornier outcome to account for. The typical explanation is that the wavicle passes through both slits to interfere with itself, spreading out in the double-slit chamber and then spontaneously collapsing in some way upon contact with the absorber surface to give a particulate signature. This “wave function collapse” mechanism is quite the brain teaser: does the wavicle spread out invisibly in the chamber as it diffracts and then somewhat mystically end up at a very localized endpoint? Why would many localized end points with no likeness to waves at all look like in phase and out of phase waves as they accumulate on the absorber screen? What exactly is going on? — Enrique
I think the analogy to consciousness is a good one. I think people are blinded because consciousness is so personal. It must be special. But it's not. — T Clark
I must admit, it don't get the whole "hard problem of consciousness" thing. For me, consciousness appears to be an emergent phenomena that arises through the interaction of physical and biological processes in the same way that life arises from chemistry. What's the big deal? — T Clark
I think the mechanisms for consciousness presented in this post are highly unlikely. To tell the truth, I don't understand what the descriptions mean. I doubt that quantum mechanics has anything special to do with consciousness beyond it's influence on all small scale phenomena. If you are going to provide novel theories of mental phenomena, you should provide references that support your beliefs. — T Clark
One would be that by staying at the visible spectrum, we are putting aside non-visual qualia, such as sound and taste. It's quite hard, if not impossible, to try and figure out how what we hear resembles anything in nature. With sight, the issue seems to be easier (but maybe it is not): the color red resembles that apple I see. So what mechanism would have to be invoked that solves the problem of non-visual qualia? — Manuel
we have no way of testing this — Manuel
Does your model follow certain aspects of Penrose's and Hammeroff's theory? — Manuel
There's also a huge leap between experience, such as the type of experience we attribute to say birds and self-consciousness, where we can reflect on this experience. — Manuel
What would be the instrument that does that, if it is not psyche? — Wayfarer
Maybe whatever binds the component functions into the subjective unity of experience is not electro-magnetic but psychic in nature. But then, science is not likely to discover that, because there’s no physical analogy for it, whereas electromagnetic fields are at least plausibly analogous to such a field, should there be one. — Wayfarer
EMF refers to an electromotive force; are you denoting the emergence of one, or merely abbreviating an Electromagnetic Field? — Aryamoy Mitra
Rigorously, Quantum Nonlocality is a formalization of the measurement statistics associated with a QM system (constituents of which, for instance, may preclude the explanatory utility of local hidden variables). When you're invoking the phrase 'nonlocality of the natural world', are you being metaphorical - or literal? — Aryamoy Mitra
are you suggesting that one elicit the Electromagnetic Fields generated by one's neuronal impulses - manipulate them, and discern whether they act as determinants to one's state of mind? — Aryamoy Mitra
One can interpret this proposition, but how might one commence an endeavor to verify it? Qualia are neither empirically amenable, nor traceable by scientific edifices (with a few exceptions, perhaps, in neuropsychological constructs). — Aryamoy Mitra
I think a basic problem with your idea is that the first experiments were conducted with light, and therefore an electric field wouldn't apply. I can't help believing that whatever mechanism applies - it would apply to both mediums equally. — Gary Enfield
Particles can be long-lasting as excitations due to their unit strength/charge as energy quanta…and from there we know the rest of the story. — PoeticUniverse
'Particles', as temporary excitations of the permanent underlying quantum fields, go through both slits because, well, as hinted, they are field quanta at heart. — PoeticUniverse
It should be mentioned though, the need to define models which for example 'explain light as a particle or a wave because it can't be both' has led to awfully misguided debates — ernest meyer
I did find the post quite difficult to follow in terms of emphasis. — Gary Enfield
For instance, isn't this quintessential of the Quantum Mind, which is partly pseudoscientific? — Aryamoy Mitra
Thanks for the information. — Zophie
So it's like some supremely spicy quantum consciousness thesis. — Zophie
If I can give you an example of increasing energy -- a chemical reaction -- or a system in energetic equilibrium -- such as a body at rest -- what would that mean for your proof?
What is 'occupied space'? Matter? If energy and matter were equivalent states of information, what would that mean for your proof? And what exactly is time as opposed to spacetime, anyway?
You're talking about physics, but whose physics do you mean? The spookiness only happens to someone looking for the primacy of objects (in this case particles) in an object-oriented ontology. — Zophie
That the rational representation of the speed of light expressed by whatever formulae can be disproved or proved is a feat of deduction. Why, though? — Zophie
Exactly, actually. — Zophie
Here we have evidence for the existence of the force. — Gary Enfield
...what does the phrase 'proportion of behavior' imply, precisely? How are you contextualizing it in a reference frame? I ask, since wave-functions aren't interchangeable with waves - one can't move across them, as one might with the latter (unless one apprehends their probability amplitudes as the QM analogs to normative crests and troughs).
...quantum states are (predominantly) transient, and are not characterized by definitive energy thresholds. Their observed energy thresholds, however, are by definition predicated on the frequencies of their states - which, in turn, are the inverse of how long they sustain itself for.
...contemplate reading with regards to the Dirac Equation - as the exercise may underpin your ideas in the framework, that formalizes them. — Aryamoy Mitra
Go for it; a Nobel Prize awaits! — tim wood
This is terribly unprincipled. — Aryamoy Mitra
Are you referring, in part, to the probabilistic nature of Schrodinger's Wavefunction? If so, can you elucidate the nature of the time contraction you're interpreting? For instance, are the notions of 'energy' you've readily apprehended, conceptually attached to the Hamiltonian Operators and Time-Evolution of a model particle? What formalism are you construing them in, from a mathematical perspective? — Aryamoy Mitra
Why is it, that there seems to exist an unrelenting fixation on integrating QM with metaphysical ideas? — Aryamoy Mitra
I'm not sure how the technical definition of a fractal applies here. Explain what you mean, please. — jgill
But this also challenges the naturalist dichotomy of mathematics being 'in the mind' and the world being 'out there', which is how we are inclined to instinctively construe it. — Wayfarer
It seems to me that pessimism and optimism are like the psychology optical illusion picture, which show a vase or two face profiles. — Jack Cummins
It would be good if kenosha kid or another real physicists would comment. — jgill