The terminology does not mean that the information stored as memory is actually in superposition like a photon fired through a double slit.
That's right as I said in the last post to you.
Did you look at the slides? The slides explain that the choices really are in a superposition even though they may or may not actually be in a superposition stemming from QM.
I don't know how this would work mechanically. But if certain quantum processes are going on in the brain, as Fisher points out is possible, then it would seem entirely possible that some choices could have been different.
You need to be careful when confronted with figurative analogies and literal analogies.
It's not a figurative analog; it's a mathematical analog. When they say "analog", they are not talking about poetry.
Memories represent actual events and not quantum states. If you slipped and banged your knee yesterday, the memory being formed should represent that literal objective event.
Why can't memories be in quantum states? Sometimes our memories fail us even though we still think we are correct. We are so far from perfect or close to perfect calculators, computers. The other day I actually wrote down 6 x 8 = 40. For about 10 seconds I felt I was correct; it was not a glitch that felt out of my control like a person with Turrets Syndrome.
On the bright side, the answer to what can save us from ourselves might be randomness. Random forces allow us to see other possibilities that may be better than what we know.
You say this, but right below you immediately contradict yourself.
There is no contradiction. You failed to understand my point. I said that decisions are determined by information exchange within neural networks and that the probability of one decision being made over another is based on the parameters of the given options and not how neural networks process information (a brain may be dysfunctional, therefore irrational).
I even gave you an example with the pants catching fire reaction probability.
There is no superposition of options, you feel the heat and you react in an entirely predicable way. Probability is assigned to nature of the options in relation to what we understand about behaviour, and not quantum superposition.
You said, "Decisions are not based on probability, but criteria. People [the brain] decides on the basis of a set of criteria. The probability of the decision rests on the options being presented.".
Then you said, "If your pants happened to catch on fire while stoking the campfire one night, it's a high probability that you would be firstly, startled, secondly, try to beat out the flames with whatever means at hand.".
Keeping this in the scope of science, what else is there other than probabilities? From what I understand, probabilities trump physical laws. Not even the laws of thermodynamics can escape the probabilistic nature of reality. If event A causes one to choose B or C, what is a better way to describe and predict B or C than using accurate probabilities? The physics of why B is more likely than C is interesting and useful for representing other kinds of probabilities, but for that specific system in that moment we can only go with a probability. So far, it is generally agreed upon that probabilities can explain how the entire universe has been born the way it was and why it evolves the way it does.
If you ultimately believe that choices might be truly objectively probabilistic, then that's really all I have been saying. This to me is science leaving the door open for allowing the possibility that a person could have chosen differently.
Decision making is based on an information exchange between neurons, their structures and connections...information related to the actual objects and events of the external world as defined by memory. Memory being the prime determinant of decisions made, or not made. No memory function equals no decisions possible, no recognition and no self awareness.
But why does my argument suddenly turn into "no memory function". You are in a different argument than the one I am in, seriously. They don't fully understand how memories are brought up and selected; I don't know where your false sense of certainty comes from.
It comes down to whether or not we are broken classical computers or quantum computers - that's it. The former is completely deterministic the latter isn't. Either way we will still have the same false sense of control.