Mind-Matter Interaction and Light

New Mind-Matter Interaction Experiments Involving Light

Dean Radin

Many types of physical systems have been used in experiments investigating mind-matter interactions (MMI). A smaller number of studies have used light as the target of mental influence.

Studies involving light are especially useful for studying MMI because light reveals behavior that is distinctively quantum in nature. In particular, it displays wave- like or particle-like behavior depending on how the light is observed.

Mind-Matter Interaction and Light
Mind-Matter Interaction and Light

In physics, “observation” is generally regarded as an irreversible amplification of a microscopic event, but there are other forms of observation, including subjective awareness. This observation-dependent effect provides a unique opportunity for studying the meaning of observation and the possible role of consciousness in the physical world.

This talk briefly reviews the relevant literature on MMI experiments using optical systems. Then it focuses on a series of 15 experiments conducted in our laboratory over the past 5 years, all involving optical interferometers.

The first study involved a Michelson interferometer, the next ten used a continuous beam Young-style double-slit interferometer, and the last four involved a single-photon double-slit system.

The cumulative evidence from these studies suggests that mental attention acts in a manner analogous to an inefficient physical detector; that is, when the detector is operating it causes light to slightly shift from wave- to particle-like behavior. But unlike a physical detector, the mind has the capacity to turn this “detector” on or off through the modulation and direction of attention. I will speculate on this and other interpretations of the experimental results.

Recorded at the 33rd annual SSE Conference in 2014 at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport, Burlingame, California, USA.

oin the SSE to support to support the Society’s commitment to maintain an open professional forum for researchers at the edge of conventional science: https://www.scientificexploration.org. The SSE provides a forum for original research into cutting edge and unconventional areas. Views and opinions belong only to the speakers, and are not necessarily endorsed by the SSE.

Mind-Matter Interaction and Light

See also: Distant influence articles, Consciousness Research

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