The Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) theory proposes that moments of conscious experience arise from quantum computations within neuronal microtubules (MTs), culminating in gravity-induced objective reduction (OR) of tubulin superpositions 1. Here we present a theoretical paradigm for non-invasively recording these conscious states by treating MT lattices as natural nano-structured metasurfaces whose optical response is dynamically modulated by Orch-OR quantum processes. Sub-wavelength periodic arrays of tubulin dimers (≈8 nm spacing) satisfy the metasurface condition, enabling anomalous reflection, refraction, and phase gradients analogous to engineered nanophotonic devices 2. Quantum superpositions and discrete OR events alter local dipole moments and refractive index, imprinting discrete phase signatures onto propagating wavefronts. Near-infrared (NIR) photons at 810 nm, chosen for optimal transcranial penetration and coupling to MT optical resonances 3-5, interact with these programmable meta-surfaces throughout the brain volume. Back-scattered or transmitted light is captured with high-sensitivity phase-resolved detectors; inverse-design algorithms reconstruct the underlying tubulin-state configurations, yielding spatiotemporal maps of conscious information. The proposal integrates established MT optical and electronic properties 6-8, metasurface physics 2,9, tissue optics 10, and Orch-OR dynamics 1. While speculative and requiring experimental validation, every component rests on peer-reviewed mechanisms, offering a physically grounded route to direct observation of the quantum substrate of consciousness.
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Martin Noirmont
Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemical Process Fundamentals
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Martin Noirmont (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69af95ee70916d39fea4e090 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18910518
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