Quantum Mechanics and Intentionality
Godehard Brüntrup
Godehard Brüntrup
Quote:Henry Stapp’s version of a collapse theory is quite different(Stapp 2007). For him quantum reality, the superposition,collapses into classical reality if probed for a specific information(cf. Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle). If a question is asked,for example if measured for a specific spin,the system provides specific information in return.From a philosophical perspective the crucial point here is that the measurement process as asking for a specific information may be seen as something implying intentionality. In that the quantum system is being represented as specific informational content, a meaningful question posed to the system can thus also be represented. Now, unless these expressions are mere metaphors and the real process is simply nothing other than a random collapse, there is some intentionality built into nature wherever these collapses occur.It is not ultimately relevant at what level of nature these probing actions happen;maybe they happen all the time even at the lowest level, or possibly they require some higher form of mentality. In any case they require something that goes beyond a classical mechanism: that nature answers a question posed to the system requires that a decision be made as to what the question will be. According to Stapp, in the collapse a big smear of possibilities is being reduced, and this reduction increases knowledge: by becoming more 12determinateandrealizing possibilities,information is represented in the universe, which in turn can be used to realize new possibilities consistent with what already has happened and what is possible by the laws of nature in the future.The representation of information is thus the key idea in Stapp’s theory; for Stapp quantum theory sees the physical world in terms of information. The billiard ball view of classical materialist atomism is replaced by the notion of a holistic and at least partly nonmaterial world consisting of an objective carrier of a growing collection of non-localized bits of information.
Representation of information, however, is a form of aboutness, it implies some form of intentionality.The crucial philosophical question is whether such intentionality requires consciousness or experience. If we follow account (1) (consciousness derived from intentionality) then a vast quantity of intentional acts of representation will happen without consciousness, and only some very complex one will be accompanied by a moment of full phenomenal consciousness. Following Whitehead’s process metaphysics, Stapp sees the world as dynamically related experiential events.But for Whitehead experience does not necessarily imply consciousness,that is to say that all conscious events are experiences but not all experiences are fully conscious. So, Stapp’s view is in principle open to an interpretation in which some form of non-conscious intentionality (Whitehead calls it ‘prehension’) permeates the universe. Another interpretation might be that the representation of information in a collapse occurs only with respect to fully conscious observers. This would be more in line with account(4),where a strong modal tie between intentionality and consciousness is claimed. Where there is intentionality, there is consciousness. It is not crucially important here to decide this question of interpretation here. What is important is that our hypothesis is corroborated: it is via the notion of intentionality that quantum mechanics becomes relevant for the philosophy of mind.
Quote:If nature has –even at the quantum level–the capacity to represent mental content and act on the mental content as such, then there is a form of intentionality built into nature. If account (4) above is correct, then Bohm’s theory implies a form of panpsychism in which some form of consciousness is ubiquitous in nature. If account (1) is correct, then there is some form of unconscious intentionality even at the very basic levels of nature. Fully developed consciousness arises from the complex configuration of these basic forms of consciousness.In any case, that Bohm places intentionality into the heart of matter via his theory of active information corroborates the thesis that the concept of intentionality links quantum mechanics to thep hilosophy of mind
Quote:This many-minds interpretation is a variant of the many-world interpretation and was first proposed by H.D. Zeh (Zeh 1970). Later David Albert and Barry Loewer developed an influential version of it (Albert, Loewer 1988). Zeh’s original idea was quite straightforward, and his goal was to avoid distinct worlds in a decohering universe without necessitating collapses of the wave functions. His idea was that there is a psycho-physical parallelism between decoherent physical states and minds. The metaphysical nature of this parallelism can be spelled out in different ways. It could be that the minds supervene on the physical states, it could also be the case that –in a more interactionist-dualist fashion –the minds actively select the physical states they correspond to. In any case the theory postulates a vast number of minds. No minds are split, they existed all along, far more than the individual minds of human persons in the common sense world.In this many-minds interpretation it is obvious that decoherence exists only in relation to a mind which represents its environment from a certain point of view. Representation by a mind, however, entails some form of intentionality. Here again it is intentionality that connects this interpretation of quantum mechanics to the philosophy of mind. The role consciousness plays in this theory depends –as might be expected by now –on how we construe the relationship between intentionality and consciousness. If we follow account (1), then the minds of the many-minds theory need to be conscious. They do feature intentional,representational states, but these states might be in many cases not complex enough to be classified as conscious because phenomenal consciousness requires some form of higher-order meta-representation. If we follow account (4), then there is a strong modal tie between intentionality and consciousness,and in any of the many minds that represents a decoherent physical state there exists a phenomenal consciousness of some sort. In fact directly following from this, there will be a vast number of conscious minds in the universe, many more than our common sense view takes for granted.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell