The physical principles underpinning self-organization in plants
Philip Turner, Laurent Nottale

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new theory explaining plant self-organization based on charge-induced quantum potentials, linking quantum processes to biological structure formation and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework connecting quantum physics with plant structure emergence, emphasizing charge interactions and macroscopic quantum phenomena.
Findings
Charge density influences plant structure formation.
Macroscopic quantum potentials enable self-organization.
The theory links quantum mechanics with biological evolution.
Abstract
Based on laboratory based growth of plant-like structures from inorganic materials, we present new theory for the emergence of plant structure at a range of scales dictated by levels of ionization (charge density), which can be traced directly back to proteins transcribed from genetic code and their interaction with external sources of charge (such as CO2) in real plants. Beyond a critical percolation threshold, individual charge induced quantum poten- tials (driven by dissipative systems) merge to form a complex, interconnected geometric web, creating macroscopic quantum potentials, which lead to the emergence of macroscopic quantum processes. The assembly of molecules into larger, ordered structures operates within these charge-induced coherent bosonic fields, acting as a structuring force in competition with exterior potentials. Within these processes many of the phenomena associated…
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