ryan
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You misinterpret the mechanism of information processing if you believe that it is entangled state or superposition that effects rational outcomes regardless of the actual processing performed by neural networks, that being their function.
Why does it have to be all or nothing with you? Clearly there would be processing too that forms the options given the input, and then maybe the consciousness (physical consciousness) has the final say.
That '' subjects may have a choice between A or B'' says nothing whatsoever about what happens from the moment that the options enter the system via the senses, propagated throughout various regions of the brain, achieving readiness potential and formed as conscious awareness of these option with the related thoughts and action.
Right, but they don't know the exact mechanism that selects from the possible options. How do you know it's not the physical consciousness that selects the outcome as reported by the subjects? My argument is maybe; yours is certain.
All I have been arguing for is that the subject might have been able to choose differently.
I thought the problem was obvious, if quantum substructure is common to all species of brains and all individual brains, yet all species of brains produce abilities and behaviours that are specific to the neural architecture of their brain and individual variations correspond to genetic diversity and personal experience (memory function) the quantum substructure, being common to all species and individual brains, is not the agency processing information and producing behaviour, but the neural architecture of a brain, albeit utilising quantum effects at synaptic junctions, etc, to perform its function as an information processor.
I gave an example of a rabbit choosing between A or B. What is stopping them from being in a superposition like humans might have?