Victor J. Steng - The Myth of Quantum Consciousness PDF
Victor J. Steng - The Myth of Quantum Consciousness PDF
Victor J. Steng - The Myth of Quantum Consciousness PDF
Department of Philosophy
University of Colorado
Victor J. Stenger
E-mail: vstenger@mindspring.com
DO NOT DISTRIBUTE
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Abstract
provides a scientific basis for ancient notions in which the human mind is
Introduction
A new myth is burrowing its way into modern thinking. The notion is spreading that
the principles embodied in quantum mechanics imply a central role for the human mind
precision and practical utility. Little dispute exists today about the structure of the
theory, which has been largely unchanged, only expanded upon, since its inception in
the early twentieth century. However, this success is not matched by a consensus on
what quantum mechanics means philosophically, that is, what it implies about "ultimate
reality." Several interpretations are equally capable of yielding the same empirical
results. Since none provides its own unique predictions, this can only mean that all the
implications on the nature of physical reality, various metaphysical elements have been
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muddled together in a genre of popular literature I call quantum metaphysics. This new
wrinkle on venerable Eastern and Platonic/Christian mysticism exploits the strong role
of the observer in quantum mechanics. Traditional religious myths, East and West, call
While the mathematical formulation and methods for the practical application of
quantum mechanics have remained largely unchanged and unchallenged for six
debated. On the fringes of this debate we find numerous popular articles and books
that promote a stupendous notion: Our egos could be right after all. Humans and
human consciousness may indeed constitute the fundamental essence of reality. If you
were to judge by the space occupied by this genre on the shelves of popular book
material bodies are brought into existence by the very act of their measurement. This
certainly clashes with our intuitive notion that the universe possesses an objective
reality independent of the observer. Surely, as Einstein insisted, the moon is still there
But many authors have construed quantum mechanics, with its strict use of
operational terms, to imply a central role for the human mind in affecting the very
nature of reality itself. Let me give a sampling of some of the expressions of this
viewpoint.
Physician Robert Lanza has written that, according to the current quantum
mechanical view of reality, We are all the ephemeral forms of a consciousness greater
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than ourselves. The mind of each human being on earth is instantaneously connected
to each otherpast, present and futureas a part of every mind existing in space and
time. In Lanzas view, quantum mechanics tells us that all human minds are united in
one mind and the entities of the universeelectrons, photons, galaxies, and the
likeare floating in a field of mind that cannot be limited within a restricted space or
period . . .(1)
interpretations of quantum mechanics. He first expressed his ideas in 1975 in The Tao of
Physics, which drew strained parallels between modern physics and Eastern
mysticism.(2) Quantum mechanics, in Capras view reveals the basic oneness of the
universe in a manner that harmonizes with the Hindu notion of Brahmin, the unifying
thread in the cosmic web, the ultimate ground of being: He on whom the sky, the
Mahesh Yogi and his Transcendental Meditation movement. Like Lanza, these sages
claim modern physics as their authority. The Maharishi has associated cosmic
In Lanzas interpretation, quantum mechanics tells us that all human minds are
united in one mind and the entities of the universeelectrons, photons, galaxies, and
the likeare floating in a field of mind that cannot be limited within a restricted space
or period . . .
These ideas strongly influenced the development of the New Age movement in
America during the latter twentieth century. Marilyn Ferguson in her 1980 New Age
bible, The Aquarian Conspiracy, said that new scientific knowledge has revised the very
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data base on which we have built our assumptions, institutions, our lives. Promising
far more than the old reductionist view, the new scientific perspective reveals a rich,
Capra was not alone in claiming parallels between the new physics and Eastern
mysticism. In The Dancing Wu Li Masters, Gary Zukav says physicists are dancing with
Kali, the Divine Mother of Hindu mythology. Zukav saw the new physics as
suggesting that there really may be no such thing as separate parts in our world.(4)
One of the Maharishis disciples, Dr. Deepak Chopra, is perhaps the most
successful of a growing group of authors who have appropriated the quantum as the
that mind can overcome the limitations set by the laws of physics and biology.
Chopras 1989 book was entitled Quantum Healing: Exploring the Frontiers of Mind/Body
Medicine.(5) Another best-seller is called, Ageless Body, Timeless Mind: The Quantum
In a similar vein, Johns Hopkins University psychiatrist Patricia Newton uses the
quantum as basis for what she says is an Afrocentric approach to healing. In a talk
presented before a medical conference, Newton said that traditional healers are able to
tap that other realm of negative entropythat superquantum velocity and frequency
of electromagnetic energy and bring them as conduits down to our level. Its not magic.
Its not mumbo jumbo. You will see the dawn of the 21st century, the new medical
quantum physics really distributing these energies and what they are doing.(7)
I do not deny a certain limited value in the traditional healing methods from
many cultures. Surely, over the ages, useful treatments for a host of aches and pains
were discovered by trial-and-error. It appears that many of these methods trigger the
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well-established placebo effect and perhaps other mechanisms by which the human
body heals itself. No doubt Western medicine can improve its methods for treating the
whole person. I simply wonder what it all has to with the quantum.
The cosmic mind, viewed from the paranormal perspective, is some sort of invisible
field that pervades the universe. Human minds are supposedly linked to this field, able
to excite it and receive excitations from it. This is far from a new idea.
reconciled with their traditional beliefs, or even used to buttress those beliefs. In the
nineteenth century, some scientists associated spiritual or psychic forces with the aether
that was thought to fill all space and provide the medium for the transmission of light
from distant stars. Going beyond physics, these scientists suggested that the aether
The belief in a universal, cosmic fluid pervading space has even older roots. To
the ancient Greeks, aether was the rarified air breathed by the gods on Olympus.
Aristotle used this term for the celestial element, the stuff of the heavens, and said it
was subject to different tendencies than the stuff of earth. That is, aether was not bound
When Newton was prompted to explain the nature of gravity, he replied that
gravity might be transmitted by the invisible aether.(8) He further suggested that the
aether also may be responsible for electricity, magnetism, light, radiant heat, and the
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motion of living things that he, like his contemporaries, thought was the consequence
Today, with knowledge not available to Newton, we can account for life as a
purely material phenomenon with no need to invoke any special life-force. Despite this,
and the complete absence of scientific support for the existence of immaterial, vital
forces, we still hear of chi, ki, prana, and psychic energyusually in association with
alternative healing. Again the ego is doing the thinking, assuming that something
Newton had envisioned matter and light as particulate in nature, though they
appear continuous to the human eye. Gravity, however, seemed to be something else,
developed to describe the apparent continuity of matter, light, and gravity. A field has a
value at each point in space, in contrast to the properties of a particle which are localized
Pressure and density in a fluid are two examples of how the field concept is
molecular level, these matter fields provide for an accurate description of the
behavior of solids, liquids, and gases because, on the everyday scale, matter appears
also were described in terms of fields. Then, in 1867, James Clerk Maxwell had one of
those rare insights that punctuate the history of science. He discovered that the
light.
continuous media such as air, pressure and density propagate as sound waves when the
media are excited. For Maxwells electromagnetic waves, the question arose: Whats
doing the waving? The analogy was drawn that all of space out to the most distant stars
phenomenon of light.
predicted, soon observed, and put to use in wireless telegraphy. One of the early
workers was the English physicist Oliver Lodge. While making major contributions to
physics and engineering, Lodge joined William Crookes, Alfred Russel Wallace (co-
their horizons to search for phenomena that transcended the world of matter.
circuits could generate and detect ethereal waves, why not the human brain?
Coincidentally, certain people who claimed to possess the ability to communicate with
other minds, living and dead, had just appeared on the scene. They were called
spiritualist mediums a century ago; today their spiritualist descendants are known as
psychics or channellers.
Unfortunately, most scientists lack the specific skills needed to distinguish fact
from illusion in the world of magic. The universe does not lie; people lie. And so Lodge
as spiritualists. They permitted their wishes and dreams to govern their senses and
reason. Lodge, desperately wanting to believe in life after death, had written
passionately about imagined communications with his son Raymond, killed in Flanders
in 1915. Sadly, he accepted the wildest claims of mediums and skilled stage magicians.
The search for psychic phenomena in the lab was carried on throughout the
twentieth century, a key figure being Joseph Banks Rhine at Duke University. Although
Rhine and others made many claims for the detection of extrasensory perception (ESP),
psychokinesis (PK), and other forms of special powers of the mind, none held up under
the light of critical scientific scrutiny. One still hears claims today that ESP and PK are
empirically established facts. However, none of these claims stand up under the same
Near the turn of the century, Michelson and Morley sought to find experimental
instead that it did not appear to exist. Shortly thereafter, in 1905, Einstein developed his
not be the vibrations of an aether. Still, Oliver Lodge remained firm in his belief that a
universal cosmic fluid existed that could be excited by the human mind. To Lodge, the
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aether was a necessity, the cosmic glue without which there can hardly be a material
universe at all.(11)
Lodge was similarly unhappy with what he was hearing quantum physicists, like
Planck and Bohr, say about the fundamentally discrete, quantized, nature of all
accumulated that matter is composed of discrete atoms, that electricity is the flow of
By the time Lodge died in 1940, both the luminiferous aether and material
continuity were already long in their graves. Today the electromagnetic aether is no
longer a candidate for the stuff of spirit. The aether simply does not exist. In its place,
even more ephemeral aether fields have been imagined as sources for spiritual
Like Lodge, Ernst Mach, and many other capable physicists of the early century,
and two collaborators, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, wrote a paper arguing that
quantum mechanics was incomplete because it does not provide for a description of
Einstein and his collaborators pointed out that, following conventional quantum
when the separation between these points is such as to require a signal moving faster
than light to carry information from one to the other in the elapsed time interval. In
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fact, a signal must move at infinite speed to connect two simultaneous events separated
any distance, even one as small as an atomic diameter. This distance could also be
billions of light years, if all events past and future are to be connected.
Yet quantum mechanics seems to allow for just such an instantaneous correlation
between separated events. This has provided a scientific basis, at least in some minds,
for the notion that the universe is one simultaneously-connected whole. Einstein
was incompatible with his claim that no signals can move faster than light.
to behave either like waves or particles, depending on which type of property you are
trying to measure. Again the distinction is between the discrete, localized properties of
Einstein, no limit on the speeds of bodies was known to exist. Furthermore, classical
waves, even those moving at finite speed that you stimulate by tossing a pebble in a
lake, can produce correlations between separated phenomena. You can imagine such a
wave carrying information in the modulation of its amplitude or frequency, just as with
waveform spreads through space. At any given time, two separated receivers on the
wave front obtain that identical information; they simultaneously hear the same
program. The two receivers can be said to be correlated, but that relationship is not a
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causal one in which an action at the place of one receiver generates a result at the place
of the other receiver. Observers at the receiver positions cannot instantaneously signal
space can still be correlated. This correlation, however, does not imply superluminal
signalling nor any other miracle; no physical law is violated. Two points in space can
receive the same information when that information originates from the same point.
measurements made at one point in space can instantaneously affect the outcome of
measurements at another point. This notion is termed nonlocality. It implies some sort of
most of our concepts of space and time on their heads. Indeed, the realization by
Einstein that motions at infinite speed made it impossible to assign points in space and
time a unique reality led him to assert that a maximum speed, the speed of light, exists.
In 1964 John S. Bell, stimulated by the ideas of David Bohm, showed how it was
possible to experimentally test the spooky way quantum mechanics seemed to allow
for the wave-like behavior of particles.(16) Following convention, I will call these
Bell showed the way to experimentally decide between the most important class
of hidden variables, those that are both local and real as are the variables of
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variables do not violate Einsteins relativity and involve no superluminal signalling. Real
variables, in this context, are like the familiar variables of classical physics, being
After a series of precise experiments, the issue was decided: Hidden variables
that are both local and real are ruled out.(17) Real, nonlocal hidden variables, such as
apparent violation of relativity. Since experiment has yet shown any such violation, a
simply that no hidden variables exist. Popular literature would lead you to think that
been observed.
incorporate nonlocality claim, with a certain illogic, that the superluminal transfer of
information is still impossible. However, I fail to see how nonlocality can imply
anything meaningful other than communication or motion faster than the speed of
light.(18)
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With experiment ruling out local hidden variables, a new holism has begun to develop.
between separated phenomena that does not exist in reductionist physics. In the new
holism, a revised quantum mechanics provides the mechanism by which signals can
move faster than light, making possible the instantaneous connections across the
universe.(19)
interpretation and not necessarily within quantum mechanics itself as a theory that
new theory, a sub-quantum theory that must lie deeper than quantum theory.
This has not discouraged many authors from finding other mystical messages
conclude that we can never adequately describe, in scientific terms, the irreducible
whole. This obscure concept has been related to the being-in-itself of that master of
For example, in their book The Conscious Universe, astrophysicist Menas Kafatos
and philosopher Robert Nadeau associate "being-in-itself" with the quantum wave
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function:
If the universe were, for example, completely described by the wave function . .
. . One could then conclude that Being, in its physical analogue at least, had been
revealed in the wave function. We could then assume that any sense we have of
profound unity with the cosmos or any sense of mystical oneness with the
cosmos, has a direct analogue in physical reality. In other words, this experience
of unity with the cosmos could be presumed to correlate with the action of the
deterministic wave function which determines not only the locations of quanta
on our brain but also the direction in which they are moving. (20)
However, let me add a cautionary note. The vision of the new holists is not so
appealing as it may first appear. The field of cosmic mind, whether aether, wave
holistic physics possesses the very Newtonian, mechanistic character that is so decried
uncertainty principle from ever being able to predict the exact outcome of events, those
and instantaneously connected to every event past and future, here on earth and far
Conclusion
consciousness other than in our own subjective perception of whatever reality is out
there. Of course our thinking processes have a strong influence on what we perceive.
But to say that what we perceive therefore determines, or even controls, what is out
there is without rational foundation. The world would be a far different place for all of
us if it was just all in our headsif we really could make our own reality as the mystics
believe. The fact that the world rarely is what we want it to be is the best evidence that
we have little to say about it. The myth of quantum consciousness should take its place
along with gods, unicorns, and dragons as yet another product of the fantasies of
people unwilling to accept what science, reason, and their own eyes tell them about the
world.
This is a greatly revised and updated version of an article first published in The
1. Lanza, Robert. The Wise Science. The Humanist 1992; Nov/Dec., 24-26.
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4. Zukav, Gary. The Dancing Wu Li Masters: An Overview of the New Physics. New
7. Patricia Newton, talk before the 98th Annual Meeting of the National Medical
8. For a history of the idea of the aether, see Cushing, J. and E. McMullin, eds.
9. For more details, see Stenger, Victor J. Bioenergetic Fields. The Scientific Review of
10. For a fuller discussion on the empirical evidence for psychic phenomena and
references, see Stenger, Victor J. Physics and Psychics: The Search for a World
Beyond the Senses. Amherst NY: Prometheus Books, 1990. For an update, see
Stenger Victor J. Has Science Found God? The Latest Results in the Search for
11. Lodge, Sir Oliver. Beyond Physics . London: Alana and Unwin, 1920.
12. Lodge, Sir Oliver. Continuity. The Presidential Address to the British Association for
13. Zohar, Danah. The Quantum Self. Human Nature and Consciousness Defined by the
14. Einstein, A., B. Podolsky, and N. Rosen. Can the Quantum Mechanical
1935; 777.
17. Aspect, Alain, Phillipe Grangier, and Roger Gerard. Experimental Realization of
Inequalities. Physical Review Letters 49, 1982; 91; Experimental Tests of Bells
1804.
18. For more discussion see Stenger, Victor J. The Unconscious Quantum: Metaphysics
in Modern Physics and Cosmology. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1995 and
19. See, for example, Talbot, Michael. The Holographic Universe. New York: Harper
Collins, 1991.
20. Kafatos, Menas and Robert Nadeau. The Conscious Universe: Part and Whole in