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Synchronistic Phenomena as Entanglement Correlations in Generalized Quantum Theory

📄 Original study
von Lucadou, Walter, Römer, Hartmann, Walach, Harald 2007 Modern Era methodology

Plain English Summary

What if psi effects are hard to replicate not because the research is flawed, but because reality works that way? Von Lucadou and colleagues argue exactly that using Generalized Quantum Theory -- quantum physics extended beyond particles to any system, including minds. Their key rule: entanglement-style links can exist but never transmit a message. From this single constraint they derive three familiar parapsychology headaches -- effects that shrink on replication, hop to unwatched variables, and dodge proof. PEAR's own data back this up, with effect sizes fading to near-zero over two decades, matching the predicted decay. The fix? Stop chasing knockout results and examine whole correlation matrices instead.

Research Notes

Central theoretical paper proposing that psi's non-replicability is a structural prediction of GQT rather than evidence of non-existence. Directly addresses the replication crisis debate and proposes correlation-matrix designs as an alternative to proof-oriented experiments. Key bridge between quantum foundations and parapsychological methodology.

Synchronistic and psi phenomena are reinterpreted as entanglement correlations within Generalized Quantum Theory (GQT), a framework extending standard quantum mechanics to non-physical systems while preserving complementarity and entanglement. From the Non-Transmission (NT) axiom — that entanglement correlations cannot transmit information — three empirically observed features of psi research are derived: the decline effect (effect sizes diminish with replication), displacement (effects migrate to unmonitored variables), and elusiveness. PEAR PK replication data show effect sizes declining from E=0.024 (1981) to E=0.001 (2000), consistent with the predicted 1/√n decay. Correlation-matrix experiments yield significantly elevated psycho-physical correlations without any detectable signal, as the model predicts.

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📋 Cite this paper
APA
von Lucadou, Walter, Römer, Hartmann, Walach, Harald (2007). Synchronistic Phenomena as Entanglement Correlations in Generalized Quantum Theory. Journal of Consciousness Studies.
BibTeX
@article{lucadou_2007_entanglement,
  title = {Synchronistic Phenomena as Entanglement Correlations in Generalized Quantum Theory},
  author = {von Lucadou, Walter and Römer, Hartmann and Walach, Harald},
  year = {2007},
  journal = {Journal of Consciousness Studies},
}