Volume 16 No 5 (2018)
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Quantum Mechanics Requires an Observer Context Distinguishing Between Reality and its Mental Representation
Franz Klaus Jansen
Abstract
When phenomena in quantum mechanics are interpreted from the perspective of bio-psychology, wave function
collapse from several to a single Eigen state must be plausibly explained. Quantum mechanics requires a context,
yet the context of an observer is rarely considered. On the other hand, in bio-psychology, the observer context is
examined to explain superposition and collapse by different mental functions used in everyday life. Three mental
functions are described, one of which is responsible for observation, and the others for conservation and treatment
of information in mental representation. Whereas observation produces information with certainty, the subsequent
processes result in information that remains uncertain potentiality. In order to encompass uncertainty, multiple
possibilities are simultaneously considered in mental superposition, one of which should represent the unknown
future outcome in observable reality. During verification by new observation, all suggested potentialities
necessarily collapse to one real outcome. The collapse of superposition does not occur in observable physical
reality, but in its mental representation. Some physical principles—such as superposition, infinity and nothingness
before the Big Bang—are pure phenomena of mental representation, which will always remain unverifiable by
observation. This argument proves that mental representation brought about by the observer context participates
in the production of mental models for the best approximation of physical reality.
Keywords
Quantum Mechanics, Superposition, Observation, Reality, Potentiality
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