• 4 Posts
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Joined 4 days ago
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Cake day: April 4th, 2026

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  • @[email protected]

    Even if a nonlocal statistical theory can reproduce the predictions of quantum mechanics, that would still remain at the level of describing outcomes, wouldn’t it?

    In reality, the unification of quantum mechanics and relativity has remained unresolved for over 150 years, and the deeper issue is that the framework itself does not define the structure of observation.

    This theory, on the other hand, addresses that very point by defining the conditions under which outcomes are realized— that is, the structure of observation itself— and treats quantum mechanics and relativity as aspects of a single generative process.

    In that sense, the question is not whether it can be described statistically, but whether the theory is structurally complete.

    From that perspective, this framework provides a more consistent explanation.



  • @[email protected]

    I understand that concern—I’ve received similar comments about the lack of peer review.

    However, I believe peer review is meaningful only when there are experts who are capable of evaluating the work in detail. In this case, the theory is quite new, and there are currently no researchers working within the same framework who could properly review it.

    It’s true that the main empirical basis is the nonlocal EEG–quantum experiment. But according to the papers, what is observed goes beyond just finding “some correlation” in data—the correlations appear under specific structural conditions, which is what led to the development of the theory.

    Also, instead of relying on peer review at this stage, the experimental methods and procedures are fully disclosed in detail. The author explicitly states that anyone can attempt to replicate the experiment.

    So if there is skepticism, the idea is: rather than just debating it conceptually, it can actually be tested directly.