Towards the end of my comments on a BBC news article titled "quantum physics explanation for smell", I started to have second thoughts about how "quantum" these results were ...
Gordon's Notes: Quantum computing in the nose
... If these results are replicated, then Turin gets a Nobel.
If noses use these 'quantum' effects, then it's pretty much certain that neurons do as well.
Does that mean our brains are 'quantum computers'? I need help from Aaronson. This 'quantization' sites on the micro-macro boundary. Not all quantized vibrations are quantum physics....
I asked Scott Aaronson, MIT prof of computational physics [1] and famed blogger if he'd consider a comment on the original article. Instead he replied by email, and gave me permission to quote ...
These look like *really* interesting experiments! And it's a priori plausible that smell would involve some quantum effect -- we already know that ... photosynthesis and bird navigation do.
If true, this doesn't IN ANY WAY imply that the brain is a "quantum computer" in the sense of using quantum coherence to speed up computation. That's a separate question, and any such suggestion would still need to overcome the problem of how entanglement could survive in the brain for any appreciable length of time.
[1] Born in 1981, when I left college. Sob.
[2] Incidentally, if I read Aaronson correctly, he suspects quantum computing is possible, but it won't solve radically new problems (and thus won't destroy the world economy if it works).
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