Monday, October 28, 2013

Class 5 Reading


  Quantum Enigma
Physics Encounters Consciousness
Second Edition
Bruce Rosenblum and Fred Kuttner

Chapter 7 (partial)
The Two-Slit Experiment: The Observer Problem



[The two-slit experiment] contains the only mystery. We cannot make the mystery go away by “explaining” how it works … In telling you how it works we will have told you about the basic peculiarities of all quantum mechanics. —Richard Feynman

In this chapter, we go for rigor in presenting the quantum enigma. In the rest of the book, we more loosely ponder what it all might mean. 

The two-slit experiment, the archetypal demonstration of quantum phenomena, displays physics encounter with consciousness. Quoting Feynman above, “We cannot make the mystery go away….” But we’ll tell how it works. 

The two-slit experiment is, in part, an interference experiment. We described interference for light waves in chapter 4 . Interference has been demonstrated with photons, electrons, atoms, and large molecules, and is being attempted with yet bigger things. Demonstrating interference with photons is an easy classroom demonstration. The slits can be two lines scratched on an opaque film. Shining a laser pointer through the slits, you can display a clear interference pattern. Electron interference is not so easy, but you can buy a dramatic classroom demonstration apparatus for a few thousand dollars. Demonstrating interference with atoms or molecules is trickier and far more expensive. But it’s basically the same idea. Since electrons or atoms would collide with air molecules, interference with objects other than photons must be displayed in a container from which the air is removed, but we’ll not worry about such technical “details.” 

Since the quantum mystery is the same in every case, and since talk presents no budget problems, we will talk in terms of atoms. Today we can see individual atoms, even pick them up and put them down one at a time. We first briefly describe the standard version of the two-slit experiment. We then follow it with a completely equivalent version that contrasts nicely with the shell game of chapter 6 .

In describing the interference of light waves in chapter 4 , we noted that to get a well-defined interference pattern, the light should be of a single color. That means light of a narrow range of frequencies and wavelengths. The same applies for atoms. The atoms should all have essentially the same de Broglie wavelength, which just means they should all come with the same speed.



Figure 7.1 Top: The two-slit diaphragm. Bottom: Edge-on view of atom source, two-slit diaphragm, and detection screen with atoms in interference pattern. 

Our slits are the two openings as shown in figure 7.1 . You send in atoms from the left. Coming through the slits, they land on a screen to the right, which we show in figure 7.2 . (We don’t care about any atoms that fail to come through the slits.) 

You record where on the screen the atoms land. They land only in certain regions. The distribution of atoms yields the pattern shown in figure 7.2 . (It’s the same as our figure 5.7 for light waves.)



Figure 7.2 Interference pattern formed by atoms coming through two narrow slits 

The pattern, an interference pattern, comes about, as with any waves, because each atom’s wavefunction comes through both slits. At some places on the screen, crests from the top slit arrive together with crests from the bottom slit. Waves from the two slits then add to produce regions of large waviness. Elsewhere, crests from one slit arrive with troughs from the other to cancel, producing regions of zero waviness. The waviness someplace is the probability of finding an atom there. You thus find regions where many atoms have hit and regions where few atoms have hit. In the “orthodox” Copenhagen interpretation of what’s going on, the wavefunction of each atom collapsed at the particular point where it hit, where it was “observed” by the macroscopic screen. 

Since each atom’s wavefunction followed a rule that depended on the spacing of the slits, something of each atom must have come through both slits. Quantum theory has no atom in addition to the wavefunction of the atom. Accordingly, each atom itself must have been a spread-out thing coming through both of the well-separated slits.



Figure 7.3 Distribution of atoms coming through a single narrow slit 

However, you could have done this experiment with only one slit open. Each atom’s wavefunction could then have come through only a single one of the narrow slits. You still find atoms landing on the screen. There could, of course, be no interference because each atom’s wavefunction came through only a single slit. But since each atom’s wavefunction came through a single narrow slit, each atom is established to be a compact thing, a particle. The atoms fall in the uniform distribution shown in figure 7.3 . 

You thus could choose to demonstrate, with both slits open, that atoms are spread-out things. Or, with only a single slit open, you could choose to demonstrate the opposite, that atoms are compact particles. This is, of course, the wave-particle paradox discussed for de Broglie waves in chapter 5 . We just told the story for atoms in terms of today’s quantum theory.

Our Box-Pairs Version of the Two-Slit Experiment

Here’s a completely equivalent version of the two-slit experiment in which you can choose to show that an object, an atom, for example, was wholly in a single box. But you could have chosen to show that that same atom was not wholly in a single box. Telling the story with atoms captured in boxes, you can decide at your leisure which contradictory situation you wish to demonstrate. This way of telling the story more dramatically displays the quantum challenge to our commonsense intuition that an observer-independent physical reality exists “out there.” We’ll refer to our box pairs again— and again —in future chapters. So we tell it carefully here.

Aristotle taught that to discover Nature’s laws one should start with the simplest examples, and from them move on to greater generalizations. Galileo accepted that injunction, but warned that we must rely on only what is experimentally demonstrable, even if the results violate our deepest intuitions. Considering the idealized behavior of isolated objects, the moon, the planets, and apples, Newton formulated his universal equation of motion. The two-slit experiment, the simplest display of quantum phenomena, follows this path. We carefully treat our box-pairs version with atoms.

In the shell game of chapter 6 , the pea had equal probability for being under each shell. Probability was not the complete description of the physical situation. There was also an actual pea definitely under one shell or the other. Observation did not change that physical situation. We will put equal parts of the waviness of a single atom in each of two boxes, so that the atom has equal probability for being in either box. But, unlike the shell game, there is no “actual atom” in a particular box. The wavefunction divided into both boxes is the complete description of the physical situation. And here, unlike the shell game, observation does change the physical situation.

To display the quantum enigma, it is not necessary to tell how our box pairs are prepared. However, since we’ve already spoken of wavefunctions, we will describe the preparation. After that, however, we will display the quantum enigma telling only what you would actually see. We will describe the box-pairs experiment, without mentioning quantum theory, or wavefunctions, without even mentioning waves.

Here’s how the atoms were put into the box pairs. Any wave can be reflected. A semitransparent mirror reflects part of a wave and allows the rest to go through. A glass windowpane, for example, allows some light through and reflects some. At the glass, the wavefunction of each individual photon splits. Part of the photon wavefunction is reflected and part is transmitted. We can also have a semitransparent mirror for atoms. It splits an atom’s wavefunction into two wave packets. One packet goes through, and another is reflected.

The arrangement of mirrors and boxes in figure 7.4 allows for the trapping of the two parts of an atom’s wavefunction in a pair of boxes. We send in a single atom at a known speed and close the doors of the boxes when the wavefunction packets are inside the boxes. After that, each part of the wavefunction bounces back and forth in its box. In figure 7.4 we show the wavefunction and waviness at three successive times.



Figure 7.4 Mirror and box-pair setup allowing the trapping of a wavefunction in a pair of boxes. An atom’s wavefunction is shown at three different times.

We know there is one, and only one, atom in each box pair because we observed an atom and sent one into each box pair. These days, with the proper tools, we can see and deal with individual atoms and molecules. With a scanning tunneling microscope, for example, we can pick up and put down, single atoms.

Holding an atom in a box without disturbing its wavefunction would be tricky, but it’s certainly doable. Dividing the wavefunction of an atom into well-separated regions is accomplished in every actual interference experiment with atoms. Capturing the atoms in physical boxes is actually not needed for our demonstration. A defined region of space would be enough. We like to think of each region defined by a box because it’s more like the shell game. We can then consider the atom sitting there waiting for us to choose what to do with it, rather than have the atom zip through a two-slit diaphragm on its way to the detection screen.

From here on, the description of our box-pairs experiment will not mention wavefunctions, or waves at all. We just tell what you would actually see. We describe quantum-theory-neutral observations. By doing this we emphasize that the quantum enigma arises directly from experimental observations. The existence of the quantum enigma does not depend on the quantum theory !



The “Interference Experiment”

You are presented with large number of box pairs. (They were prepared as we described above, but for the demonstration of the enigma, you need not know anything of the preparation.) Position a box pair in front of a screen on which an impacting atom would stick. Open a narrow slit in each box, at about the same time. An atom hits the screen. Repeat this with many identically positioned box pairs. You find that atoms cluster in some regions of the screen, but avoid other regions. The pattern is the same as that shown previously in figure 7.2 for a pair of slits. Each atom followed a rule allowing it to land in certain regions and forbidding it from landing in other regions.



Figure 7.5 Interference patterns formed by atoms coming through two narrow slits with different slit separations

Now repeat this procedure with a new set of box pairs. This time have a different spacing between the boxes of each pair. You find the regions where the atoms clustered are spaced differently. The larger the spacing between the boxes of a pair, the smaller is the spacing between the places where atoms land. We illustrate this with figure 7.5 . Each and every atom followed a rule that depends on the spacing of its box pair. Each atom therefore had to “know” its box-pair spacing.

Clearly, the experiment we just described is an interference experiment, like the two-slit experiment, and we’ll now call it an “interference experiment.” But we did not use any property of waves. Something of each atom had to come from each box because where atoms landed depended on the box-pair spacing. This interference experiment establishes that each atom had been a spread-out thing, in both boxes of its pair. (Nothing done outside the boxes while the atom is still inside has any effect at all.)

What explains a whole atom appearing on the screen while some of it had to come from each box of its pair? Might it not make sense to say that part of each atom was in each box? In that case, part of the atom emerged from each box of its pair, and then congealed to the spot on the screen where you found it. That reasonable-sounding idea doesn’t work. Here’s why:

The “Which Box?” Experiment

Instead of doing the experiment by opening the slits in the boxes of a pair at the same time, choose a different experiment: Open a slit in one box, and then later , open a slit in the other box. Opening one box, you sometimes find a whole atom impacts the screen. If so, when you open the other box of that pair, nothing comes out. If you open a box and nothing appears on the screen, then, for sure, an atom will appear on the screen when you open the second box. Repeatedly opening boxes of a set of box pairs one box at a time, you determine which box the whole atom was in. You demonstrate that there had been a whole atom in one box, and that the other box of that pair contained nothing . With atoms wholly in a single box, box spacing would not be relevant. Indeed, you find a uniform distribution of atoms hitting the screen, as previously seen in figure 7.3 for the case of a single slit being open.

There’s a more direct way to establish that each atom was wholly in a single box. Simply look in a box to see which box held the atom. It doesn’t matter how you look. You can, for example, shine an appropriate light beam into the box and see a glint from the atom. About half the time you will find a whole atom in the looked-in box; about half the time you find the box empty. If there is no atom in the box you first look in, it will always be in the other. If you find an atom in one box, the other box of its pair will be totally empty . No observation, of any kind, would find anything at all in that empty box. This “which-box?” experiment, or “look-in-the-box” experiment, establishes that each atom was concentrated in a single box of its pair, that it was not spread out over both boxes.

But before you looked, you could have done an interference experiment establishing that something of each atom had been in both boxes. You therefore could choose to prove either that each atom had been wholly in a single box, or you could choose to prove that each atom had not been wholly in a single box. You can choose to prove either of two contradictory situations.

The ability to prove either of two contradictory results is puzzling. Wanting to explore further, some have asked: “What if you do both experiments with the same atoms? What if you open the box pairs at the same time, in order to get an interference pattern, but also look to see which box each atom came out of.” Such looking is essentially a which-box experiment. Absolutely anything you do that allows you to know which box the atom was in defeats the atom’s ability to obey

the rule giving an interference pattern.

Seeking a loophole, a logician might note that the interference experiment relies on circumstantial evidence. It uses one fact, the interference pattern, to establish another fact, that each atom came out of both boxes. This is true of any interference experiment. Finding no other reasonable explanation, physics universally accepts interference as establishing spread-out waviness. As in our legal system, circumstantial evidence can establish a conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt.

A theory leading to a logical contradiction is necessarily an incorrect theory. Does the ability to demonstrate either of two contradictory things about atoms (and other objects) invalidate quantum theory? No. You did not demonstrate the contradiction with exactly the same things. You did the two experiments with different atoms.

The Quantum Enigma

Here’s a logically conceivable explanation of your ability to prove either of two contradictory things: Those box pairs for which you chose an interference experiment actually contained objects spread out over both boxes, not wholly in a single box. And those box pairs for which you chose a which-box experiment actually contained compact objects wholly in a single box. How could you establish otherwise?

You reject this explanation. You reject it because you know that, given a set of box pairs, you could have made either choice. You freely chose which experiment to do. You have free will. At least your choices were not predetermined by a physical situation external to your body, by what was supposedly “actually” in the box pairs.

Did your free choice determine the external physical situation? Or did the external physical situation predetermine your choice? Either way, it doesn’t make sense. It’s the unresolved quantum enigma.

Important point: We experience an enigma because we believe that we could have done other than what we actually did. A denial of this freedom of choice requires our behavior to be programmed to correlate with the world external to our bodies. The quantum enigma arises from our conscious perception of free will. This mystery connecting consciousness with the physical world displays physics’ encounter with consciousness.

History Creation

To a certain extent at least, our present actions obviously determine the future. But obviously, our present actions cannot determine the past . The past is the “unchangeable truth of history.” Or is it?

Finding an atom in a single box means the whole atom came to that box on a particular single path after its earlier encounter with the semi-transparent mirror. Choosing an interference experiment would establish a different history: that aspects of the atom came on two paths to both boxes after its earlier encounter with the semi-transparent mirror.

The creation of past history is even more counterintuitive than the creation of a present situation. Nevertheless, that’s what the box-pairs experiment, or any version of the two-slit experiment, implies. Quantum theory has any observation creating its relevant history.

The Quantum Theory Description

Now that we have established the experimental basis of the enigma, we offer quantum theory’s explanation. Since we can choose to observe an atom to be in either of two contradictory situations, how does quantum theory describe the state of the atom before we observe it? The theory describes the world in mathematical terms. In those terms, when an atom can be observed in either of two contradictory situations, or “states,” the wavefunction of the total physical situation is written as the sum of the wavefunctions of those two states separately. Expressing this mathematics in words, the wavefunction of one of the states is “the-atom-is-wholly-in-the-top -box.” The wavefunction of the other state is “the-atom-is-wholly-in-the-bot tom-box.” The wavefunction of the unobserved atom is “the-atom-is-wholly-in-the-top -box” plus “the-atom-is-wholly-in-the-bot tom-box.” The atom is said to be in a “superposition” of these two states. It is simultaneously in both states. On looking in a box, this sum, or superposition, collapses randomly to one or the other term of the superposition. But before we look, the atom is simultaneously in both boxes. The atom is in two places at once.

Observation collapses the waviness, the probability, to a specific actuality. But what constitutes an “observation”? Observation is ultimately not explained within quantum theory. What constitutes observation is controversial. The pragmatic Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, physics’ “orthodox” position (more fully discussed in chapter 10 ) defines any recording of a microscopic event by a macroscopic measuring instrument as an observation. Or, more strictly, any interaction of a microscopic system with a macroscopic system constitutes an observation if it would make a demonstration of interference essentially impossible. Not all physicists accept this for-all-practical-purposes interpretation of observation. We leave the issue, for now.



Chapter 16 (partial)
The Mystery of Consciousness

What is meant by consciousness we need not discuss; it is beyond all doubt. —Sigmund Freud

Consciousness poses the most baffling problems in the science of the mind. There is nothing that we know more intimately than conscious experience, but there is nothing that is harder to explain. —David Chalmers

Does consciousness collapse wavefunctions? That question, raised at the beginning of quantum theory, cannot be answered. It can’t even be well posed. Consciousness itself is a mystery.

When we described the experimentally demonstrated quantum facts and the quantum theory explaining those facts (as distinct from the theory’s several contending interpretations), we presented the undisputed consensus of the physics community. We cannot describe such a consensus in our discussion of consciousness. There is none. There is, of course, a large amount of undisputed experimental data, but diametrically opposed explanations of that data are strongly held. We have our own take, but, you may notice, we waver.

Until the 1960s, behaviorist-dominated psychology avoided the term “consciousness” in any discussion that presumed to be scientific. There has since been an explosion of interest in consciousness. Some attribute this to the striking developments in brain imaging technology that allow seeing which parts of the brain become active with particular stimuli. But according to an editor of the Journal of Consciousness Studies :

It is more likely that the re-emergence of consciousness studies occurred for sociological reasons: The students of the 1960s, who enjoyed a rich extra-curricular approach to “consciousness studies” (even if some of them didn’t inhale), are now running the science departments.

Interest in the foundations of quantum mechanics grows at the same time as does interest in consciousness. And connections are seriously proposed. There’s something in the air.

What Is Consciousness?

We’ve talked about consciousness but never clearly defined it. Dictionary definitions of “consciousness” are little better than those for “physics.” We’ve been using “consciousness” as roughly equivalent to “awareness.” For us, “consciousness” most definitely includes the perception of free choice by the experimenter. This use of “consciousness” is that quite standard in the treatment of the quantum measurement problem. Ultimately, a definition is manifest by the use of the term. (As Humpty Dumpty told Alice: “When I use a word … it means just what I choose it to mean,” and the philosopher Wittgenstein, who taught that a word is defined by its use, would more or less agree.)

One can know of the existence of consciousness in no other way than through our first-person feeling of awareness, or the second-person reports of others. (In our following chapter we suggest an apparent quantum challenge to this limitation.)

We do not discuss many of the things found in treatments of consciousness from a psychological point of view. We do not, for example, talk about optical illusions, mental disturbance, self-consciousness, or Freud's seat of hidden emotions, the unconscious.

Our concern is with that “consciousness” related to the observer's free choice of experiment, the consciousness that physics encounters.

Our frequent example of physics’ encounter with consciousness is the decision to observe an object in a single box causing it to be wholly there. We say “causing” only because the observer presumably could have chosen to do an interference observation establishing a contradictory situation—that the object was not wholly in a single box. The observer could have, we assume, chosen to establish that the object was a wave simultaneously in two boxes.

Does such a demonstration necessarily require a conscious observer? Couldn’t a not-conscious mechanical robot, or even a Geiger counter, do the observing? It depends on what you mean by “observing.” For now, just recall that if that robot or Geiger counter were isolated from the rest of the world, and was governed by quantum theory, it would merely become entangled as part of a total superposition state, as did Schrödinger’s cat. In that sense, it would not observe .

The quantum enigma arises from the assumption that experimenters can freely choose between two experiments, two experiments that yield contradictory results. We assume that the experimenters had the “free will” to make that choice. However, we can’t evade the quantum enigma by denying the free will of the experimenters, that is, merely by having their choices somehow determined by the electrochemistry of their brains. To evade the quantum enigma, the required denial of free will must go much further. It must include the denial of counterfactual definiteness. That denial must include the assumption of a “conspiratorial” world. (In our example, the experimenter’s “choices” would have to match the physical situation in the box pairs.)

Today’s discussions of free will in psychology or neurophysiology usually focus more narrowly on whether the choices we make are somehow predetermined by the electrochemistry of our brain. This free will issue is therefore peripheral to the quantum enigma. But “free will” constantly comes up in connection with the quantum enigma.

Free Will

Problems with free will arise in several contexts. Here’s an old one: Since God is omnipotent, it might seem unfair that we be held responsible for anything we do. God, after all, had control. Medieval theologians resolved this issue by deciding that every train of events starts with a “remote efficient cause” and ends with a “final cause,” both in God’s hands. Causes in between come about through our free choices, for which we will be held accountable on judgment day.

This medieval concern is not completely remote from that of today’s philosophers of morality. Similarly, criminal defense lawyers can make the concern practical by arguing that the defendant’s actions were determined by genetics and environment rather than by free will. We, however, will deal with a more straightforward free-will issue.

Classical physics, Newtonian physics, is completely deterministic. An “all-seeing eye,” viewing the situation of the universe at one time, can know its entire future. If classical physics applied to everything , there would be no place for free will.

However, free will can happily coexist with classical physics. In chapter 3 on the Newtonian worldview, we told how physics, in days gone by, could stop at the boundary of the human body, or certainly at the then completely mysterious brain. Scientists could dismiss free will as not their concern and leave it to the philosophers and theologians.

That dismissal does not come so easily today as scientists study the operation of the brain, its electrochemistry, and its response to stimuli. They deal with the brain as a physical object whose behavior is governed by physical laws. Free will does not fit readily into that picture. It lurks as a specter off in a corner.

Most neurophysiologists and psychologists tacitly ignore that corner. Some though, taking a physical model to apply broadly, deny that free will exists and claim that our perception of free will is an illusion. The controversy this creates will be right up front when we soon discuss the “hard problem” of consciousness.

How could you demonstrate the existence of free will? Perhaps all we have is our own feeling of free will and the claim of free will that others make. If no demonstration is at all possible, perhaps the existence of free will is meaningless. Here’s a counter to that argument: Though you can’t demonstrate your feeling of pain to someone else, you know it exists, and it’s certainly not meaningless.

A famous free-will experiment has generated fierce argument. In the early 1980s, Benjamin Libet had his subjects flex their wrist at a time of their choice, but without forethought. He determined the order of three critical times: the time of the “readiness potential,” a voltage that can be detected with electrodes on the scalp almost a second before any voluntary action actually occurs; the time of the wrist flexing; and the time the subjects reported that they had made their decision to flex (by watching a fast-moving clock).

One might expect the order to be (1) decision, (2) readiness potential, (3) action. In fact, the readiness potential preceded the reported decision time. Does this show that some deterministic function in the brain brought about the supposedly free decision? Some, not necessarily Libet, do argue this way. But the times involved are fractions of a second, and the meaning of the reported decision time is hard to evaluate. Moreover, since the wrist action is supposed to be initiated without any “preplanning,” the experimental result seems, at best, ambiguous evidence against conscious free will.

In 2008, John-Dylan Haynes went beyond fractions of a second. He and his colleagues monitored neural activity with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). As letters appeared on a screen in front of them, subjects were asked to push the button in their right hand or the one in their left whenever they felt like it, or randomly. They then reported the letter they saw when they decided which button to push. From the fMRI signal, the researchers could predict seventy percent of the time (guessing works fifty percent of the time) the button that would be pushed, as much as ten seconds before the reported decision time. Haynes commented: “This doesn’t rule out free will, but it does make it implausible.”

Does it really? Presumably, if a subject were told during that ten-second interval, “You are going to push the left-hand button,” they could still freely choose to push the right-hand button. Being able to roughly predict someone’s behavior from an fMRI does not seriously challenge their free will. Predicting behavior from facial expression also works quite well.

Belief in our free will arises from our conscious perception that we make choices between possible alternatives. If free will is just an illusion, and we’re all just sophisticated robots controlled by our neurochemistry with perhaps a bit of thermal randomness, is our consciousness then also an illusion? (If so, what is it that is having that illusion?)

Though it is hard to fit free will into our usual scientific worldview, we cannot, ourselves, with any seriousness, doubt it. J. A. Hobson’s comment seems apt to us: “Those of us with common sense are amazed at the resistance put up by psychologists, physiologists, and philosophers to the obvious reality of free will.”

If you’re going to deny free will, stopping at the electrochemistry of the brain is arbitrary. After all, the motivation for suggesting such denial is the Newtonian determinism of classical physics. Being logically consistent, and thus accepting that reasoning all the way, we come to the completely deterministic world where the “all-seeing eye” can know the entire future of everything, including our experimenters’ supposedly-free choice leading to the quantum enigma.

Unlike arbitrarily stopping at the electrochemistry of the brain, accepting complete determinism does evade the quantum enigma. For most of us, being “robots” in a completely deterministic world is too much to swallow. However, accepting both free will and the undisputed quantum experiments, we come to the quantum enigma. And to quantum theory for an explanation.

And quantum theory, unlike classical physics, is not a theory of the physical world independent of the experimenters’ freely made decisions, their free will. According to John Bell:

It has turned out that quantum mechanics cannot be “completed” into a locally causal theory, at least as long as one allows … freely operating experimenters.

Before Bell’s theorem, “free will”–or an explicit assumption of “freely operating experimenters”–was not something seen in a book about physics. It was certainly not seen in a serious physics journal . That’s of course changing. In December 2010, for example, the prestigious journal Physical Review Letters published a calculation of precisely how much free will would have to be given up to account for the correlations observed by freely operating experimenters performing twin-state photon experiments. It’s 14%. What that means in human terms is not clear.

Let’s explore observation by Bell’s “freely operating experimenters.” Recall Pascual Jordan’s defining statement of the Copenhagen interpretation, the working physicist’s interpretation: “Observations not only disturb what is to be measured, they produce it.” “Observation” here is an open-ended term, but the creation of physical reality by any kind of observation is hard to accept. However, it’s not a new notion.

From Berkeley to Behaviorism

The idea of physical reality being created by its observation goes back thousands of years to Vedic philosophy, but we skip ahead to the eighteenth century. In the wake of Newton’s mechanics, the materialist view that all that exists is matter governed by mechanical forces gained wide acceptance. Not everybody was happy with it.

The idealist philosopher George Berkeley saw Newtonian thinking as demeaning our status as freely choosing moral beings. Classical physics seemed to leave little room for God, and that appalled him. He was, after all, a bishop. (It was common in those days for English academics to be ordained as Anglican priests, though the celibacy of Newton’s day was no longer required. Berkeley married.)

Berkeley rejected materialism with the motto esse est percipi , “to be is to be perceived,” meaning all that exists is created by its observation. To the old question, “If a tree falls in the forest with no one around to hear it fall, is there any sound?” Berkeley’s answer would presumably be that there wasn’t even a tree were it not observed.

Though Berkeley’s almost solipsistic stance may seem a bit batty, many idealist philosophers of his day were enthusiastic about it. Not so Samuel Johnson, who supposedly responded by kicking a stone, stubbing his toe, and declaring, “I refute him thus!” Stone kicking made little impression on those partial to Berkeley’s thinking, which is, of course, impossible to disprove.

God may be omnipotent but he is not omniscient. If God’s observation collapses the wavefunctions of large things to reality, quantum experiments indicate that He is not observing the small.

The idea that the world around us was being created by its observation never took hold. Most practical people, surely most scientists of the eighteenth century, considered the world to be made up of solid little particles, which some called “atoms.” These were presumed to obey mechanical laws much as did those larger particles, the planets. While physical scientists might speculate about the mind, and some used hydraulic pictures for it instead of today’s computer models, for the most part they ignored it.

In the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, scientific thinking was generally equated with materialist thinking. Even in psychology departments, consciousness did not warrant serious study. Behaviorism became the dominant view. People were to be studied as “black boxes” that received stimuli as input and provided behaviors as output. Correlating the behaviors with the stimuli was all that science needed to say about what goes on inside. If you knew the behavior corresponding to every stimulus, you would know all there is to know about the mind.

The behaviorist approach had success in revealing how people respond and, in some sense, why they act as they do. But it did not even address the internal state, the feeling of conscious awareness and the making of apparently free choices. According to behaviorism’s leading spokesman, B. F. Skinner, the assumption of a conscious free will was unscientific. But with the rise of humanistic psychology in the latter part of the twentieth century, behaviorist ideas seemed sterile.

The “Hard Problem” of Consciousness

Behaviorism had waned when, in the early 1990s, David Chalmers, a young Australian philosopher, shook up the study of consciousness by identifying the “hard problem” of consciousness. In a nutshell, the hard problem is that of explaining how the biological brain generates the subjective, inner world of
experience . Chalmers’s “easy problems” include such things as the reaction to stimuli and the reportability of mental states, and all the rest of consciousness studies. Chalmers does not imply that his easy problems are easy in any absolute sense. They are easy only relative to the hard problem. Our present interest in the hard problem of consciousness, or awareness, or experience, arises from its apparent similarity (and connection?) to the hard problem of quantum mechanics, the problem of observation.

Before going on about the hard problem and the heated arguments it continues to generate, a bit about David Chalmers: As an undergraduate student, he studied physics and mathematics and did graduate work in mathematics before switching to philosophy. Though it is not central to his argument, Chalmers considers quantum mechanics likely relevant to consciousness. The last chapter of his landmark book, The Conscious Mind , is titled “The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics.” David Chalmers was a faculty colleague at the University of California, Santa Cruz, in the philosophy department, before he (to our regret) moved to the University of Arizona to become a director of the Center for Consciousness Studies. He is, at the time of this writing, back in his native Australia as the director of the Centre for Consciousness at Australia National University.

Chalmers’s easy problems often involve the correlation of neural activity with physical aspects of consciousness, the “neural correlates of consciousness.” Brain-imaging technology today allows the detailed visualization of metabolic activity inside the thinking, feeling brain and has stimulated fascinating studies of thought processes.

Exploration of what goes on inside the brain is not new. Neurosurgeons have long correlated electrical activity and electrical stimulation with reports of conscious perception by placing electrodes directly on the exposed brain. This is done largely for therapeutic purposes, of course, and scientific experimentation is limited. Electroencephalography (EEG), the detection of electrical potentials on the scalp, is even older. EEG can rapidly detect neuronal activity but can’t tell much about where in the brain the activity is taking place.

Positron emission tomography (PET) is better at finding out just where in the brain neurons are firing. Here, radioactive atoms, of oxygen for example, are injected into the blood stream. Radiation detectors and computer analysis can determine where there is an increase in metabolic activity, and can correlate this call for more oxygen with reports of conscious perceptions.

The most spectacular brain imaging technology is functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). It is better than PET at localizing activity and involves no radiation. (The examined head must, however, be held still in a large, usually noisy, magnet.) MRI is the medical imaging technology we described in chapter 9 as one of the practical applications of quantum mechanics. fMRI can identify the part of the brain that is using more oxygen during a particular brain function responding to an external stimulus.

fMRI can correlate a brain region with the neural process involved in, say, memory, speech, vision, or reported awareness. The computer-generated, false-color brain images produced can display just which regions in a brain require more blood when someone thinks, say, of food or feels pain. Like any technique based on metabolic activity, fMRI is not fast.

Is the physical brain that these techniques observe, presumably all there is to the brain, also all there is to the mind? While the work today relating neural electrochemistry to consciousness may be rudimentary, just suppose that improved fMRI, or some future technology, could completely identify particular brain activations with certain conscious experiences. This would correlate all (reported) conscious feelings with metabolic activity, and perhaps even with the underlying electrochemical phenomena. Such a complete set of the neural correlates of consciousness is the ultimate goal of much of today’s consciousness research involving the brain.

Were this goal actually achieved, some say we would have accomplished all that can be accomplished. Consciousness, they claim, would be completely explained because there is nothing to it beyond the neural activity we correlate with the experiences we call “consciousness.” If we take apart an old pendulum clock and see how the swinging weight driven by a spring moves the gears, we can learn all there is to know about the workings of the clock. The claim here is that consciousness will be similarly explained by our learning all about the neurons making up the brain.

Francis Crick, physicist co-discoverer of the DNA double helix, who turned brain scientist, looked for the “awareness neuron.” For him, our subjective experience, our consciousness, is nothing but the activity of such neurons. His book The Astonishing Hypothesis identifies that hypothesis:

“You,” your joys and sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules.

If so, the intuition that our consciousness and free will are experiences beyond the mere functioning of electrons and molecules in our brain is an illusion. Consciousness should therefore ultimately have a reductionist explanation. It should, in principle at least, be completely describable in terms of simpler entities, the neural correlates of consciousness. Subjective feelings thus supposedly “emerge” from the electrochemistry of neurons. This is akin to the readily accepted idea that the surface tension or “wetness” of water emerges from the interaction of hydrogen and oxygen atoms forming contiguous molecules of water.

Such emergence forms Crick’s “astonishing hypothesis.” Is it really so astonishing? We suspect that, to most physicists at least, it would seem a most natural guess.

Crick’s long-time younger collaborator, Christof Koch, takes a more nuanced approach: Given the centrality of subjective feelings to everyday life, it would require extra ordinary factual evidence before concluding that qualia and feelings are illusory. The provisional approach I take is to consider first-person experiences as brute facts of life and seek to explain them.

In a slightly different context, Koch further balances different views:

While I cannot rule out that explaining consciousness may require fundamentally new laws, I currently see no pressing need for such a step.

… [But] [t]he characters of brain states and of phenomenal states [ experienced states] appear too different to be completely reducible to each other. I suspect that their relationship is more complex than traditionally envisioned.

David Chalmers, a principal spokesperson for a point of view diametrically opposite to Crick’s, sees explaining consciousness purely in terms of its neural correlates to be impossible . At best, Chalmers maintains, such theories tell us something about the physical role consciousness may play, but those physical theories don’t tell us how consciousness arises:

For any physical process we specify there will be an unanswered question: Why should this process give rise to [conscious] experience? Given any such process, it is conceptually coherent that it could cccccc [exist] in the absence of experience. It follows that no mere account of physical process will tell us why experience arises. The emergence of experience goes beyond what can be derived from physical theory.

While atomic theory might reductively explain the wetness of water and why it clings to your finger, that’s a far cry from explaining your feeling of its wetness. Chalmers, denying the possibility of any reductive explanation of consciousness, suggests that a theory of consciousness should take experience as a primary entity alongside mass, charge, and space-time. He suggests that this new fundamental property would entail new fundamental laws, which he calls “psychophysical principles.”

Chalmers goes on to speculate on these principles. The one he considers basic, and the one most interesting to us, leads to a “natural hypothesis: that information (at least some information) has two basic aspects, a physical aspect and a phenomenal aspect.” This postulate of a dualism recalls the situation in quantum mechanics, where the wavefunction also has two aspects: On the one hand, it is the total physical reality of an object, while on the other hand, that reality, some have conjectured, is purely “information” (whatever that means).

To argue that conscious experience goes beyond intellectual knowing, some tell the story of Mary. Mary is a scientist of the future who knows everything there is to know about the perception of color. But Mary has never been outside a room where everything is black or white. One day she is shown something red. For the first time, Mary experiences red. Her experience of red is something beyond her complete knowledge of red. Or is it? You can no doubt generate for yourself the pro and con arguments the Mary story provokes.

Philosopher Daniel Dennett in his widely quoted book Consciousness Explained , describes the brain’s dealing with information as a process where “multiple drafts” undergo constant editing, coalescing at times to produce experience. Dennett denies the existence of a “hard problem,” considering it a form of mind–brain dualism. He claims to refute it by arguing:

No physical energy or mass is associated with them [the signals from the mind to the brain]. How then do they make a difference to what happens in the brain cells they must affect, if the mind is to have any influence over the body? … This confrontation between quite standard physics and dualism is widely regarded as the inescapable and fatal flaw of dualism.

Since Chalmers argues that consciousness obeys principles beyond standard physics, it is not clear that an argument based on “quite standard physics” can be a refutation of Chalmers. Moreover, there’s a quantum loophole in Dennett’s argument: No mass or energy is necessarily required to determine to which of the set of possible states a wavefunction will collapse upon observation.

Our own concern with the hard problem of consciousness arises, of course, because physics has encountered consciousness in the quantum enigma, which physicists call the “measurement problem.” Here, aspects of physical observation come close to those of conscious experience. In both cases, something beyond the normal treatment, of physics, or of psychology, appears to be needed for a solution.

The essential nature of the measurement problem in quantum mechanics has been in dispute since the inception of the quantum theory. Similarly, ever since consciousness has become scientifically discussed in psychology and philosophy, its essential nature has been in dispute. An example of the rather extreme divergence of opinion appeared in 2005 in the New York Times , where some leading scientists were asked to state their beliefs. According to cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman:

I believe that consciousness and its contents are all that exists. Space-time, matter and fields never were the fundamental denizens of the universe but have always been, from their beginning, among the humbler contents of consciousness, dependent on it for their very being.

Psychologist Nicholas Humphrey sees it differently:

I believe that human consciousness is a conjuring trick, designed to fool us into thinking we are in the presence of an inexplicable mystery.


Friday, October 25, 2013

Class 4 Readings and Class 3 Video

Sorrow for this late addition to the blog. I sent out emails but forgot to post.


The video from class 3 is posted on YouTube:


The reading assignment for class 4 is Chapter 1 of David Bohm's Wholeness and the Implicate Order, pages 1 - 24.

‎shenjiva.com/DavidBohm-WholenessAndTheImplicateOrder.pdf

Bohm's book is considered a classic of the field. Enjoy.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Class 2 Links

Quantum Leap Video from PBS Nova:


http://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=em-subs_digest-vrecs&v=EGhQmNZhlqw&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DEGhQmNZhlqw%26feature%3Dem-subs_digest-vrecs


Video recording of Class 2: (Private)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkjOLTz7g98&feature=em-share_video_user



Class 3 Readings




Quantum Reality
Nick Herbert

IS CONSCIOUSNESS A TYPE OF QUANTUM KNOWLEDGE?

Science's biggest mystery is the nature of consciousness. It is not that we possess bad or imperfect theories of human awareness, we simply have no such theories at all. About all we know about consciousness is that it has something to do with the head, rather than the foot. That's not much but it appears to be more than the ancient Egyptians knew; the Egyptians threw away the brain before beginning their elaborate embalming procedures, judging it to be a mere accessory.

Is it possible that consciousness is some sort of quantum effect? Is human awareness a privileged access to the "inside" of the quantum world, an open door to some brain quon's realm of possibility? Can we know firsthand what it is like to dwell in the quantum world just by sitting still and looking inside our heads? Human mental experience seems to be of two kinds--an experience of facts, memories, emotions, body states-a thoroughly classical kind of knowing which we might call "computer consciousness," which takes place against a peculiar background of "raw awareness"-that uncanny yet familiar feeling we relinquish when we go to sleep and awaken into every morning. Some have called thus second kid of experience "consciousness without an object." I call it “ordinary awareness" and believe that it is one human quality that distinguishes us from computers--at least computers as they are presently constituted.

If ordinary awareness is a direct connection to quantum reality, then just as our external knowledge of quantum entitles may be characterized by the term "quantum ignorance, “ so we might call this immediate internal experience of the world's real nature "quantum knowledge." One of the greatest scientific achievements imaginable would be the discovery of an explicit relationship between the waveform alphabets of quantum theory and certain human states of consciousness. Bell's theorem shows that although the world's phenomena seem strictly local, the reality beneath this phenomenal surface must be superluminal. The world's deep reality is maintained by an invisible quantum connection whose ubiquitous influence is unmediated, unmitigated, and immediate. Unconfirmed rumors of telepathy and other alleged powers of mind aside, our basic computer consciousness appears to be as local as any other classical phenomenon. However, if ordinary awareness is a private manifestation of deep quantum reality, Bell's theorem requires our quantum knowledge to be non-local, instantly linked to everything it has previously touched. Since this type of awareness consists of consciousness without content, it is difficult to see what use we could make of such non-local
connections. On the other hand, perhaps these connections are not there for us to "use."

Religions assure us that we are all brothers and sisters, children of the same deity, biologists say that we are entwined with all life-forms on this planet: our fortunes rise or fall with theirs. Now, physicists have discovered that the very atoms of our bodies are woven out of a common superluminal fabric. Not merely in physics are humans out of touch with reality, we ignore these connections at our peril. Albert Einstein, a seeker after reality all his life, had this to say concerning the illusion of separate- ness: "A human being ls part of the whole, called by us 'Universe', a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings as something separated from the rest-a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. Nobody is able to achieve this completely but the striving for such achievement is, in itself, a part of the liberation and a foundation for inner security."



Consciousness
Dark Pool of Light – Richard Grossinger
The Neuroscience, Evolution, and Ontology of Consciousness

Introduction

What - when you really think about it - is consciousness? I had long understood that this is the mega-question of both science and philosophy but I had not appreciated either the tautology of epicycles that neuroscience had projected onto relations between the brain and the mind or the full boggle of philosophy's forays in search of subjective being. Our own awareness is the thing in the universe most difficult to understand or vindicate. As one chemist friend emailed me upon learning that I was writing this book "I personally have no idea what the mind is. I know what a brain is but I have no idea how the two are related." This is a plaint of the sort that I have heard so often that I tend now to hear its undercurrent too: "Can you believe that the relationship got so weird we can't fit mind into the universe anymore or for that matter, even find it?"

Most working scientists share this perplexity yet they cannot entertain the notion that consciousness might have a source beyond entropy and its workarounds. It is a lynchpin of modernity that we cannot be intrinsically and independently conscious. Of course even the folks who propose that we cannot cannot. The only way they can adduce or uphold their own  mindedness is by overdetermining or  misplacing concreteness in one form or another and then assigning it a basis in their own brain. Failing (of course) to uncover such a basis they concoct one. Physicists and biologists will no more admit the contraversions in their theories than say Tea Party Americans will risk conceding that Barack Obama was born in the USA. For scientists to tolerate any exogenous source of consciousness would be to forfeit their eminent domain and vested legitimacy - the basis of their declaration of power. Consciousness must finally be either illusional or imaginary - a spinoff of thermodynamics and neural stacking. It cannot aspire to any higher status. If it ever gets a foothold outside entropy their goose is cooked.

I mean to kamikaze rather than skulk into this snafu avoiding resorts of quantum mechanical metaphors that relocate science  and spirituality at layers of the same general paradox. What I seek instead is an actual convergence of scientific and psychic attunements - very very different birds that stick out hard beaks and sharp claws in trying to bash the other into nonexistence. I force them into coexistence and frame their meanings in terms of each others. I can't think of anyone else eager enough to operate at this frequency yet I believe that it is precisely where we have to go. Mind cannot be shriven onto its tissues. There are no two ways about it. Either human experience is an emergent evolutionary state of the brain and nothing more creating just a mirage of consciousness or it is a transpersonal event that has always existed in the universe, a form of structured information that does not have to be physically embodied and can transmute from one state to another.



The Information
James Gleick 

Prologue

We can see now that information is what our world runs on: the blood and the fuel the vital principle. It pervades the sciences from top to bottom transforming every branch of knowledge. Information theory began as a badge from mathematics to electrical engineering and from there to computing. What English speakers call "computer science" Europeans have known as  informatique,  informatik  and informatika. Now even biology has become an information science a subject of messages  instructions  and code.  Genes  encapsulate  information  and  enable procedures for reading it in and writing it out. Life spreads by networking. The body itself is an information processor. Memory resides not just in brains but in every cell. No  wonder  genetics  bloomed  along  with  information  theory.  DNA  is  the quintessential information molecule the most advanced message processor at the cellular level-an alphabet and a code 6 billion bits to form a human being. "What lies at the heart of every living thing is not a fire not warm breath not a spark of life declares the evolutionary theorist Richard Dawkins. "It is information, words, instructions.... If you want to understand life don't think about vibrant, throbbing gels and oozes, think about information technology." The cells of an organism are nodes in a richly interwoven communications network transmitting and receiving coding and decoding. Evolution itself embodies an ongoing exchange of information between organism and environment.

"The information circle becomes the unit of life" says Werner Loewenstein after thirty years spent studying intercellular communication.  He  reminds us  that information means something deeper now: "It connotes a cosmic principle of organization and order and it provides an exact measure of that." The gene has its cultural analog too: the meme. In cultural evolution a meme is a replicator and propagator, an idea, a fashion, a chain letter or a conspiracy theory. On a bad day a meme IS a virus.

Economics is recognizing itself as an information science now that money itself is completing a developmental arc from matter to bits stored in computer memory and magnetic strips world finance coursing through the global nervous system. Even when money seemed to be material treasure heavy in pockets and ships holds and bank vaults it always was information. Coins and notes shekels and cowries were all just short lived technologies for tokenizing information about who owns what. And atoms? Matter has its own coinage and the hardest science of all physics seemed to have reached maturity. But physics too finds itself sideswiped by a new intellectual model. In the years after World War II the heyday of the physicists the great news of science appeared to be the splitting of the atom and the control of nuclear energy. Theorists focused their prestige and resources on the search for fundamental particles and the laws governing their interaction the construction of giant accelerators and the discovery of quarks and gluons.  From this exalted enterprise the business of communications research could not have appeared further removed. At Bell labs Claude Shannon was not thinking about physics. Particle physicists did not need bits.

And then all at once they did. Increasingly the physicists and the information theorists are one and the same. The bit is a fundamental particle of a different sort: not just tiny but abstract-a binary digit a flipflop a yes-or-no. It is insubstantial yet as scientists finally come to understand information they wonder whether it may be primary, more fundamental than matter itself. They suggest that the bit is the irreducible kernel and that information forms the very core of existence. Bridging the physics of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries John Archibald Wheeler the last surviving collaborator of both Einstein and Bohr put this manifesto in oracular monosyllables: "It from Bit." Information gives rise to "every it-every particle every field of force even the space-time continuum itself." This is another way of fathoming the paradox of the observer: that the outcome of an experiment is affected or even determined when it is observed. Not only is the observer observing she is asking questions and making statements that must ultimately be expressed in discrete bits. "What we call reality" Wheeler wrote coyly "arises in the last analysis from the posing of yes/no questions." He added: "All things physical are information-theoretic in origin and this is a participatory universe." The whole universe is thus seen as a computer - a cosmic information-processing machine.

A key to the enigma is a type of relationship that had no place in classical physics: the phenomenon known as entanglement. When particles or quantum systems are entangled their properties remain correlated across vast distances and vast times. Lightyears apart they share something that is physical yet not only physical. Spooky paradoxes arise unresolvable until one understands how entanglement encodes information measured in bits or their drolly named quantum counterpart quoits. When photons and electrons and other particles interact what are they really doing? Exchanging bits transmitting quantum states processing information. The laws of physics are the algorithms. Every burning star every silent nebula every particle leaving its ghostly trace in a cloud chamber is an information processor. The universe computes its own destiny.

How much does it compute? How fast? How big is its total information capacity, its memory space? What is the link between energy and information, what is the energy cost of flipping a bit? These are hard questions but they are not as mystical or metaphorical as they sound. Physicists and quantum information theorists, a new breed, struggle with them together. They do the math and produce tentative answers. ("The bit count of the cosmos, however it is figured, is ten raised to a very large power" according to Wheeler. According to Seth Lloyd: "No more than 10**120   ops on 10**90 bits.") They look anew at the mysteries of thermodynamic entropy and at those notorious information swallowers black holes. "Tomorrow" Wheeler declares "we will have learned to understand and express all of physics in the language of information.