Scivillage.com Casual Discussion Science Forum

Full Version: Anyons: the two dimensional particles that reframe reality (philosophy of physics)
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
https://aeon.co/essays/anyons-the-two-di...me-reality

EXCERPTS: In recent years, evidence has been accumulating for a third class of particles called ‘anyons’. Their name, coined by the Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek, gestures playfully at their refusal to fit into the standard binary of bosons and fermions – for anyons, anything goes. If confirmed, anyons wouldn’t just add a new member to the particle zoo.

[...] Philosophically, however, there’s a wrinkle in the story. The theoretical foundations make it clear that anyons are possible only in two dimensions, yet we inhabit a three-dimensional world. That makes them seem, in a sense, like fictions. When scientists seek to explore the behaviours of complicated systems, they use what philosophers call ‘idealisations’, which can reveal underlying patterns by stripping away messy real-world details. But these idealisations may also mislead. If a scientific prediction depends entirely on simplification – if it vanishes the moment we take the idealisation away – that’s a warning sign that something has gone wrong in our analysis.

So, if anyons are possible only through two-dimensional idealisations, what kind of reality do they actually possess? Are they fundamental constituents of nature, emergent patterns, or something in between? Answering these questions means venturing into the quantum world, beyond the familiar classes of particles, climbing among the loops and holes of topology, detouring into the strange physics of two-dimensional flatland – and embracing the idea that apparently idealised fictions can reveal deeper truths.

[...] First, maybe anyons aren’t real in a deep sense. For instance, some philosophers have argued that so-called ‘paraparticles’ – a whole other class of particles – are really nothing more than bosons and fermions in disguise. By the same reasoning, one could argue that anyons are simply familiar particles dressed up with extra labels. The difference lies in the notation, not in the physics. Mathematically, for the simpler cases, that might be enough. But in the more complex cases, in which particle paths wind around each other leaving a lasting memory on the system, it’s much harder to dismiss the new behaviour as mere convention.

Alternatively, then, maybe we need a new framework that captures the strange behaviour without relying on a structure that evaporates the instant we lift into the third dimension. If experiments definitively confirm the existence of anyons, perhaps there’s another way to explain them that doesn’t rely so heavily on the topological quirks of idealised, flat spaces.

Or maybe there’s a third possibility, one that flips the script... (MORE - missing details)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8XIC1v-6II

Metaphysics - it's the height of scientific thinking.

[Image: proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fimg-s-msn-...ba7a0afc9c]

Your mind could be a quantum hologram across space and time

Scientists are exploring a revolutionary theory that suggests human consciousness might operate as a quantum hologram, potentially extending across space and time. This concept, which integrates principles of quantum mechanics with neural activity, challenges traditional views of the mind. It builds on quantum theories regarding the emergence of space, time, and gravity, as well as insights from naked singularities into the fabric of quantum space-time.


[Image: proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.msn...27e68cba82]

The Holographic Nature of Consciousness

The idea that brain waves might encode consciousness as a holographic projection is gaining traction among researchers. This theory leverages quantum mechanics to explain how the brain achieves perceptual unity despite distributed neural processing. According to a report from Popular Mechanics, brain waves could function as a holographic medium, storing and processing information in a way that mirrors quantum systems. This approach could offer a solution to the “binding problem” in neuroscience, where the brain integrates disparate sensory inputs into a coherent experience.

Quantum effects in biological systems, such as entanglement in microtubules, provide a potential mechanism for holographic information storage in the brain. These microtubules, which are structural components of neurons, might facilitate quantum coherence, allowing for a unified consciousness that transcends the physical boundaries of the brain. This perspective aligns with the idea that consciousness could be a non-local phenomenon, influenced by quantum entanglement.
Quantum Foundations of Space and Time
The hypothesis that space and time emerge from quantum entanglement and informational patterns is a cornerstone of modern theoretical physics. As detailed in a Quanta Magazine article, foundational research in quantum gravity suggests that gravity might be an entropic force arising from holographic boundaries in quantum systems. This perspective challenges classical notions of gravity and offers a new framework for understanding the universe’s fundamental structure.

Taken from: MSN

This theory of emergent holographic spacetime is identical to the concept of a self-generating universe in the CTMU. Consciousness might operate as a quantum hologram, extending across space and time.