As if to prove my pessimistic statements about Skeptiko wrong,
Mr.Sandman has posted
there about an interesting
experimental proposal by
the theoretical physicist Lucien Hardy,
for a test of Bell's inequalities, in which random number generators are replaced by
the output of EEGs. This has sparked off some discussion:
http://www.skeptiko-forum.com/threads/a-...tter.3831/
Funnily enough, a professor of
theoretical physics recommended a little while ago that I should look at
the work of Hardy and his
former research supervisor, Euan Squires. (I had also noted previously
the paper referred to on "Quanta and Qualia" by Professor Adrian Kent, Professor of
Theoretical Physics at Cambridge [England] =
http://psiencequest.net/forums/thread-ad...ualia-2016 )
Regardless of
the details I think it is encouraging that mainstream
theoretical physicists are willing to ask questions like
these.
I'm afraid my understanding of
the relevant physics is virtually non-existent, but based on my feeble ef
forts to grasp what this is about, I don't think Hardy is coming at it from quite
the same angle as
the parapsychologists who think "spooky action at a distance"/entanglement may be
the physical process that underlies psi phenomena.
Subject to correction, it seems
there is a viewpoint that
the "spookiness" could be dispelled if
the universe were in some fundamental sense deterministic, so that
the random number generators used in tests of Bell's inequalities were really only pseudo-random, allowing an escape from
the spectre of non-local action.
Apparently Hardy's idea is that even if this were true,
the human mind might not be deterministic - ei
ther because it didn't depend entirely on
the material world, or because complex systems somehow transcended
the prevailing determinism of
the physical universe. If I understand correctly, that's
the notion this experiment would test - though I'm happy to be corrected if I've misunderstood.