If we performed a trillion 50⁄50 quantum coin flips, and found a program with K-complexity far less than a trillion that could explain these outcomes, that would be an example of evidence in favor of this hypothesis. (I don’t think it’s very likely that we’ll be able to find a positive result if we run that particular experiment; I’m naming it more to illustrate the kind of thing that would serve as evidence.) (EDIT: This would only serve as evidence against quantum outcomes being truly random. In order for it to serve as evidence in favor of quantum outcomes being impacted by consciousness, the low K-complexity program explaining these outcomes would need to route through the decisions of conscious beings somehow; it wouldn’t work if the program were just printing out digits of pi in binary, for example.)
My inside view doesn’t currently lead me to put much credence on this picture of reality actually being true. My inside view is more like “huh, I notice I have become way more uncertain about the a priori arguments about what kind of universe we live in—especially the arguments that we live in a universe in which quantum outcomes are supposed to be ‘truly random’—so I will expand my hypothesis space for what kinds of universes we might be living in”.
If we performed a trillion 50⁄50 quantum coin flips, and found a program with K-complexity far less than a trillion that could explain these outcomes, that would be an example of evidence in favor of this hypothesis. (I don’t think it’s very likely that we’ll be able to find a positive result if we run that particular experiment; I’m naming it more to illustrate the kind of thing that would serve as evidence.) (EDIT: This would only serve as evidence against quantum outcomes being truly random. In order for it to serve as evidence in favor of quantum outcomes being impacted by consciousness, the low K-complexity program explaining these outcomes would need to route through the decisions of conscious beings somehow; it wouldn’t work if the program were just printing out digits of pi in binary, for example.)
My inside view doesn’t currently lead me to put much credence on this picture of reality actually being true. My inside view is more like “huh, I notice I have become way more uncertain about the a priori arguments about what kind of universe we live in—especially the arguments that we live in a universe in which quantum outcomes are supposed to be ‘truly random’—so I will expand my hypothesis space for what kinds of universes we might be living in”.