Does Quantum Theory Explain Consciousness?
astroengine writes "Quantum theory is often seen as the root cause of unrelated, mysterious phenomena. Take consciousness for example. British physicist Roger Penrose recently argued 'that we will need to invoke 'new physics and exotic biological structures': rewriting quantum theory to make sense of consciousness.' But why do this, especially as there is no apparent causal link between quantum mechanics and the conscious mind? There appears to be a very basic logical fallacy here that even the most prominent physicists seem to be making."
Care to state it?
He wants the brain to be non-computable, non-simulatable. In short, he wants it to be magic. He has no real justification for his position.
>>Consciousness is weird. Quantum theory is weird. Therefore quantum theory must explain consciousness.
Quantum Theory is the new "magic" for all sorts of New Age thinkers.
Penrose at least proposes a mechanism of action (quantum tube thingies), which has the benefit of at least giving his theory something more than hand-waving to base his theory on, but has the downside of having absolutely no evidence to support it from studies of the structure of the brain.
Penrose is a smart guy (black holes and tiling and all that) but he does like to propose some rather outlandish things in his free time. Might be a correlation between the two, who knows.
Consciousness is weird. Quantum theory is weird. Therefore quantum theory must explain consciousness.
That's essentially the argument here, and it's pretty easily seen as fallacious.
Well, the slashdot link, and the New Statesman story linked to from it, don't really do justice to Penrose's idea, so it's not surprising that you've gotten the impression that there's absolutely nothing there. Actually there's something to it, and although as a physicist I don't buy it, it's not completely stupid.
The basic idea is that there are various ways to interpret quantum mechanics. The most popular interpretations are the Copenhagen interpretation and the many-worlds interpretation (MWI).
My own take on it is that Copenhagen and MWI are just different words for talking about the theory, so the distinction isn't empirically testable. Copenhagen does a good job of depicting the psychological experience of doing experiments with quantum-mechanical systems, but Copenhagen is illogical because it gives a special role to measurement, which is actually a physical process like any other.
Penrose's idiosyncratic idea is that he takes Copenhagen seriously, so he says that measurement is somehow *different* from other physical processes. That suggests that consciousness is somehow different from other physical processes. He also claims that his idea is at least in principle empirically testable, that we should be able to see this process happen by studying neurons. He thinks there is something special going on in microtubules.
Slashdot's readers would have been a lot better off just reading the WP article on Penrose's theory.
Find free books.
This place is full of Quantum; it's everywhere you look
It's in the halls of Physicists, and pages of a book.
"There has to be a fallacy!" the comment summarised,
And if we care to challenge that, we aren't very wise?
But 'consciousness is quantum' is facile, don't you think?
One hell of a non sequitur; he's right to raise a stink.
Without supporting data, the statement is absurd,
I'm with OP, this is dopey - at best the logic's blurred!
Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
"Blurred" is just the kind of logic that the quantum minds require.
Like Hellen's scientists, with their Earth, Wind, Water, Fire.
You see, a lot of the mystery becomes quite easy to explain
By introducing "aether" - why that's what's in the brain!