From quantum measurement to biology via retrocausality

Prog Biophys Mol Biol. 2017 Dec:131:131-140. doi: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2017.06.012. Epub 2017 Jun 21.

Abstract

A reaction cycle in general or a metabolic cycle in particular owes its evolutionary emergence to the covering reaction environment acting as a measurement apparatus of a natural origin. The quantum measurement of the environmental origin underlying the molecular processes observed in the biological realm is operative cohesively between the measuring and the measured. The measuring part comes to pull in a quantum as an indivisible lump available from an arbitrary material body to be measured. The inevitable difference between the impinging quantum upon the receiving end on the part of the environment and the actual quantum pulled into the receiving end comes to effectively be nullified through the retrocausative propagation of the corresponding wave function proceeding backwards in time. The retrocausal regulation applied to the interface between the measuring and the measured is to function as the organizational agency supporting biology, and is sought in the act for the present in the immediate future within the realm of quantum phenomena. Molecular dynamics in biology owes both the evolutionary buildup and maintenance of its organization to the retrocausal operation of the unitary transformation applied to quantum phenomena proceeding backwards in time. Quantum measurement provides the cohesive agency that is pivotal for implementing the retrocausal regulation. In particular, the physical origin of Darwinian natural selection can be seen in the retrocausal regulation applied to the unitary transformation of a quantum origin.

Keywords: Backwards in time; Measurement; Molecular dynamics; Origins; Quantum as a lump; Quantum correlation; Retrocausality; Unitary transformation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution
  • Biology / methods*
  • Quantum Theory*