Between Myth and History: von Neumann on Consciousness in Quantum Mechanics

arXiv:2508.15871v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: The von Neumann attitude on such a deep interpretational question as the role of a human observer in order for the quantum description of measurement to be consistent has been long misrepresented. The large majority of the subsequent literature ascribed to von Neumann a radical view, according to which not only the collapse was in itself a truly physical process, but also the only way to accomodate it within a quantum description of a typical measurement was the introduction of human consciousness as a kind of ‘causal’ factor. Inspired by the work of reconstruction pursued by the phenomenological reading of the London-Bauer approach, started by Steven French more than twenty years ago, the account I propose substantiates a significantly more cautious attitude by von Neumann: the time seems then ripe to tell a more balanced story on the relation between the notion of consciousness and the foundations of quantum mechanics in the work of the first scientist – Janos von Neumann – who explicitly and rigorously addressed the implication of a really universal formulation of quantum physics.

More From Author

A Theory of the Big Bang in McTaggart’s Time

Active Prostate Phantom with Multiple Chambers

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *