Hey Sci (pinging you as @
Sciborg_S_Patel),
In an unrelated email exchange, the documentary
The End of Quantum Reality (
trailer), released in 2020, was recommended to me. It is based on Wolfgang Smith's life and primary ideas, and can be rented or bought on various platforms (I rented it on YouTube). Although I haven't (yet?) watched any of the videos you posted above, I thought it would be useful to share what I took from that documentary, partly cribbed from and based on my response in that email exchange:
The key idea in it seems like a potentially powerful solution to the modern problem that until now I've only intuited but not fully expressed: how is it that an external physical world utterly devoid of qualities is perceived as
having qualities by conscious observers?
The typical modern view is that these qualities are produced by our brains as a sort of extrapolation (not the best word) from frequencies and various other quantifiable physical properties that are input to them via the physical senses, but it's not a very satisfying view.
Wolfgang's view that there is an
intermediate realm - the "corporeal" - between the physical and the mental in which qualities
already exist seems to make more sense.
The most relevant part of the video is from 57:44 to 1:04:13, and most especially between 58:37 and 1:00:00. This quote seems key:
"[Narrator:] There exists one and only one function, S, from the corporeal to the physical domain, which can serve as a bridge [...]. S is the function which to every corporeal object X assigns the physical object SX, which is none other than the corporeal object X as conceived by the physicist. [Wolfgang:] SX represents the quantitative side of X to the exclusion of all else. What has been jettisoned to put it in Aristotelian and Thomistic terms are precisely the qualitative aspects of X and its substantial form."
This slightly later one from Wolfgang in printed words spoken by the narrator also seems important:
"No one on either side of the Copenhagen debate seems to have realized that the role of quantum particles is not to bestow but to receive being."
From rewatching and reconsidering this part of the video, the relationship between the physical and the corporeal on Wolfgang's view now seems clear: the physical is simply the corporeal stripped of everything qualitative (and substantial) and reduced to the quantitative; the physical is thus a strict subset of the corporeal, and thus
depends on the corporeal, especially via "vertical causation", for its very being.
It seems like an elegant solution. I'd need to think about it more carefully before wholly endorsing it though.