From Quantum Cognition to Conceptuality Interpretation I: Tracing the Brussels Group's Intellectual Journey
Diederik Aerts, Massimiliano Sassoli de Bianchi, Sandro Sozzo

TL;DR
This paper explores the conceptuality interpretation of quantum mechanics, proposing that quantum entities are akin to concepts, and discusses how quantum cognition inspired this view, offering new insights into the nature of reality.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interpretation linking quantum mechanics with human cognition, emphasizing the conceptual nature of quantum entities and their parallels with cognitive processes.
Findings
Quantum entities modeled as concepts.
Proposed cognitive underpinnings of quantum phenomena.
Potential for future cross-disciplinary research.
Abstract
The conceptuality interpretation of quantum mechanics proposes that quantum entities have a conceptual nature, interacting with the material world through processes that are the physical counterpart of the meaning-based processes which typically occur in human cognition. This interpretation emerged from the early developments in quantum cognition, a field that uses quantum mathematics to model human cognitive activity. It benefited from the specific approach taken by the Brussels research group, modeling concepts themselves as quantum entities and minds as measuring apparatuses. The article sketches the essential steps of the intellectual journey going from the first applications of quantum notions and formalisms to human cognition to the proposal of a potentially groundbreaking interpretation of quantum mechanics, offering profound explanations for major quantum phenomena. This was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications
