Explore how your brain might function as a quantum computer, with neurons as qubits and thoughts as evolving wavefunctions, potentially explaining our ability to process multiple possibilities simultaneously.

Neuron= physical qubit -2+ interacting/entangled neurons= logical qubit -brain regions = logical registers -Entire brain = unified wavefunction/tensor product -thoughts = unitary operations rotating above wavefunction, evolving it over time -measurement collapse= decohered separate snapshots of interactions. Like photographs of different brain regions interacting to form memories and thoughts. We can process things in probabilities and simultaneously in our subconscious.


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**Lena:** Hey Miles, have you ever had that weird feeling where you're thinking about multiple things at once? Like, not just multitasking, but actually holding contradictory thoughts in your head simultaneously?
**Miles:** All the time! And it's fascinating because that's exactly what quantum physicists talk about with superposition—where particles exist in multiple states until measured. Some researchers are exploring whether our brains might operate on similar principles.
**Lena:** Wait, are you saying our brains might be quantum computers? That sounds like science fiction!
**Miles:** I know it sounds wild, but there are serious scientific models suggesting quantum effects could influence consciousness. One proposes that phosphorus atoms in our brain cells might maintain quantum entanglement, potentially explaining how neurons synchronize across distances.
**Lena:** That's mind-blowing! So our thoughts could literally be quantum processes?
**Miles:** Well, it's still highly speculative, but these models are being investigated with increasingly sophisticated tools. What's particularly interesting is how the tetrahedral geometry of phosphate molecules might actually help preserve quantum entanglement longer than we'd expect in the warm, noisy environment of the brain.
**Lena:** So our brains might be running quantum calculations without us even knowing it? That's incredible! Let's dive into how these quantum models of consciousness actually work and what they might tell us about how we think.