It doesn’t tie in directly to evolution, but the misconceptions are related
What I mean is, if there’s some special feature of humans that collapses wave functions, do all living things have this feature, or was there an animal that had it whose mother didn’t have it?
Greg Egan wrote a book, Quarantine, specifically playing with that idea. (that is, the premise for the story is that it is specific features of the human brain that causes collapse… and those features can be artificially disabled)
Larry Niven mentioned something similar to this, regarding his… um… Future History books (the ones with Beowulf in them—and the three-legged centaur aliens).
At one point in the series he postulated that the centaurs had been breeding the humans for luck—we’d become the luckiest species in the Galaxy. He later on said that, if luck was an inheritable trait then it would be the best inheritable trait. Everyone would have it already.
Presumably the same thing would go for QM waveform non-collapsure; it must be useful somehow. Not that it makes any sense.
What I mean is, if there’s some special feature of humans that collapses wave functions, do all living things have this feature, or was there an animal that had it whose mother didn’t have it?
Greg Egan wrote a book, Quarantine, specifically playing with that idea. (that is, the premise for the story is that it is specific features of the human brain that causes collapse… and those features can be artificially disabled)
Ooooooh!
Larry Niven mentioned something similar to this, regarding his… um… Future History books (the ones with Beowulf in them—and the three-legged centaur aliens).
At one point in the series he postulated that the centaurs had been breeding the humans for luck—we’d become the luckiest species in the Galaxy. He later on said that, if luck was an inheritable trait then it would be the best inheritable trait. Everyone would have it already.
Presumably the same thing would go for QM waveform non-collapsure; it must be useful somehow. Not that it makes any sense.
Back to our regularly scheduled reasoning...