Theory of Brain Function, Quantum Mechanics and Superstrings
D. Nanopoulos

TL;DR
This paper explores a theoretical framework linking brain function, quantum mechanics, and superstring theory, proposing that microtubules support quantum states related to consciousness and explaining certain cognitive phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model connecting microtubule quantum superpositions with consciousness, collapse mechanisms, and physiological actions, integrating string theory concepts.
Findings
Microtubules can support quantum superpositions relevant to mental processes.
Quantum collapse in microtubules occurs within approximately one second.
The model explains phenomena like backward masking and non-locality in consciousness.
Abstract
Recent developments/efforts to understand aspects of the brain function at the {\em sub-neural} level are discussed. MicroTubules (MTs) participate in a wide variety of dynamical processes in the cell, especially in bioinformation processes such as learning and memory, by possessing a well-known binary error-correcting code with 64 words. In fact, MTs and DNA/RNA are unique cell structures that possess a code system. It seems that the MTs' code system is strongly related to a kind of ``Mental Code" in the following sense. The MTs' periodic paracrystalline structure make them able to support a superposition of coherent quantum states, as it has been recently conjectured by Hameroff and Penrose, representing an external or mental order, for sufficient time needed for efficient quantum computing. Then the quantum superposition collapses spontaneously/dynamically through a new,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFractal and DNA sequence analysis
