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If mental faculties are emergent properties, what is illogical about propounding that a larger system than us or than Earth itself might have conceived of designs such as we have for our systems?


Where did that system come from? What designed it?


You have to answer that question for any model of the universe - what came before the Big Bang? Another universe? What before it? And intelligent design is essentially analogous to simulation theory, and answers more questions than it creates (the anthropic principle, for starters).

My personal mental model is that the ‘intelligence’ guides quantum collapse and so the progression of the universe is somewhat deterministic but also not really because ‘important’ collapse decisions are guided towards some higher purpose. This model also doesn’t necessarily require an actual intelligence, I imagine that with the quasi omnitemporal aspect of qm, in this model something like love or consciousness could be an optima that the system moves towards, the ‘love’ optimum would be maximum interpersonal quantum entanglement and ‘consciousness’ being maximizing coherent networks. Not that I have any delusions about my theory being the case, it’s just a model I’ve built up over a while and find interesting to think about, but I doubt it bears any weight on reality.


Evolution doesn’t require an original designer. It is itself a means of lifting design from disorder.

I think you are very confused about quantum mechanics and so-called collapse, as what you are parroting is a very old misconception. Observers don’t cause collapse, as collapse doesn’t happen. Observer doesn’t mean a conscious entity, but rather any interacting particle. And that interaction causes the multi-particle state to become entangled. That is all.


I know, I wasn’t going off of that. I meant that whatever mysterious, emergently random force that determines what path a given quantum system will take, would be either driven by certain consciousness (assuming quantum processes in consciousness) related maxima, or it would be the so called hand of god. For example, the fact that there’s an infinitesimal chance for particles to suddenly become something else under QM, one might call that a miracle.


There is no "mysterious, emergently random force that determines what path a given quantum system will take." This is complete BS. Sorry to pull an argument from authority, but I am a trained physicist. This is a persistent misunderstanding of entanglement and so-called "collapse" of the wave function, dating back to a popular science misunderstanding of an incomplete and since discredited interpretation of quantum mechanics by Niels Bohr over a century ago.

There is no guiding hand, metaphorical or literal, choosing how a quantum system evolves. You can posit one, if it makes your metaphysics more agreeable, but it is a strictly added assumption, like any other attempt to insert god into physics.


> There is no guiding hand, metaphorical or literal, choosing how a quantum system evolves.

Indeed, nicely put.

To be even more specific about why not: Bell's theorem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell%27s_theorem) shows that, with some reasonable assumptions about locality, quantum mechanics cannot be explained away by a set of hidden variables that guide an "underlying" deterministic/non-random system.


I think what you're saying might be construed to be the opposite of what you're intending, so just to clarify: Bell's inequality implies that IF there is some sort of underlying force guiding quantum phenomena, then it must be non-local (AKA faster-than-light). For deep technical reasons this is such a hard pill to swallow, that a physicist would choose almost any other theory over this. It's effectively positing an infinite, all-knowing god, as anything less than this would not be able to consistently control selection of these quantum choices.

It's an added reason to be dubious though. The primary and most fundamental reason to reject this idea of "quantum selection" is that nothing is actually being selected. In a system with two possible outcomes, both happen. "We" (the current in-this-moment "we") end up in one of those paths with some probability, but both outcomes actually do happen. This is the standard, accepted model of physics today.




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