Abstract

There has been an upsurge of interest lately in developing Wigner’s hypothesis that conscious observation causes collapse by exploring dynamical collapse models in which some purportedly quantifiable aspect(s) of consciousness resist superposition. Kremnizer–Ranchin, Chalmers–McQueen and Okon–Sebastián have explored the idea that collapse may be associated with a numerical measure of consciousness. More recently, Chalmers–McQueen have argued that any single measure is inadequate because it will allow superpositions of distinct states of equal consciousness measure to persist. They suggest a satisfactory model needs to associate collapse with a set of measures quantifying aspects of consciousness, such as the “Q-shapes” defined by Tononi et al. in their “integrated information theory” (IIT) of consciousness. I argue here that Chalmers–McQueen’s argument against associating a single measure with collapse requires a precise symmetry between brain states associated with different experiences and thus does not apply to the only case where we have strong intuitions, namely human (or other terrestrial biological) observers. In defence of Chalmers–McQueen’s stance, it might be argued that idealized artificial information processing networks could display such symmetries. However, I argue that the most natural form of any theory (such as IIT) that postulates a map from network states to mind states is one that assigns identical mind states to isomorphic network states (as IIT does). This suggests that, if such a map exists, no familiar components of mind states, such as viewing different colours, or experiencing pleasure or pain, are likely to be related by symmetries.

Highlights

  • The hypothesis that wave function collapse is an objective process, caused by conscious observation, is widely attributed to Wigner [1]; a more detailed history, starting with discussions by London–Bauer and von Neumann, is given by Chalmers and McQueen [2, 3]. It has recently been revived by proposals [2,3,4,5,6,7,8] aimed at defining precise dynamical theories that combine ideas for proposed objective quantifications of aspects of consciousness—in particular Tononi et al.’s “integrated information theory” (IIT) [9] and related ideas—with objective dynamical collapse models

  • We have argued that collapse models based on a single measure of consciousness seem consistent with experience

  • Thought experiments that attempt to place humans in superpositions of distinct but conscious states do not refute such models, because it seems unlikely that humans can sustain precisely the same level of consciousness in any state for long, or that there are distinct human conscious states that remain precisely conscious for long

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Summary

Introduction

The hypothesis that wave function collapse is an objective process, caused by conscious observation, is widely attributed to Wigner [1]; a more detailed history, starting with discussions by London–Bauer and von Neumann, is given by Chalmers and McQueen [2, 3]. As Chalmers–McQueen note, the idea that consciousness causes collapse has some motivation, was taken seriously by some of the pioneers of quantum theory, and, given that there is no consensus solution to the quantum measurement problem, Page 3 of 14 62 seems worth keeping on the table for and examining more carefully.. As Chalmers–McQueen note, the idea that consciousness causes collapse has some motivation, was taken seriously by some of the pioneers of quantum theory, and, given that there is no consensus solution to the quantum measurement problem, Page 3 of 14 62 seems worth keeping on the table for and examining more carefully.1 As they note, their proposals and arguments should apply to a wide range of quantitative theories of consciousness; we may take IIT as a placeholder that illustrates some of the issues that would arise with possibly more satisfactory proposals. There is no superposition of states with distinct Φ values, and so a Φ-collapse model will leave the superposition uncollapsed

Human Observers
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Ideal Observers
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Qualia and Symmetries
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Symmetries and Mind States
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Earlier Relevant Work
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Summary
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Full Text
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