Quantum theory and the role of mind in nature
Henry P. Stapp, (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

TL;DR
This paper explores a quantum theory perspective where consciousness influences physical reality, addressing key issues in reconciling this view with relativistic quantum field theory and explaining mental effects on the brain through the quantum Zeno effect.
Contribution
It proposes solutions to integrate consciousness into quantum theory and explains mental influence on brain activity using the quantum Zeno effect, advancing the understanding of mind-matter interaction.
Findings
Reconciles quantum consciousness with relativistic quantum field theory.
Suggests the quantum Zeno effect as a mechanism for mental influence on brain.
Provides explanations for psychological phenomena within quantum physics.
Abstract
Orthodox Copenhagen quantum theory renounces the quest to understand the reality in which we are imbedded, and settles for practical rules describing connections between our observations. Many physicist have regarded this renunciation of our effort to describe nature herself as premature, and John von Neumann reformulated quantum theory as a theory of an evolving objective universe interacting with human consciousness. This interaction is associated both in Copenhagen quantum theory and in von Neumann quantum theory with a sudden change that brings the objective physical state of a system in line with a subjectively felt psychical reality. The objective physical state is thereby converted from a material substrate to an informational and dispositional substrate that carries both the information incorporated into it by the psychical realities, and certain dispositions for the occurrence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Biofield Effects and Biophysics · Paranormal Experiences and Beliefs
