Quantum phenomenology as a “rigorous science”

26 July 2021, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Husserl remained a few famous and notable philosophical “slogans” along with his innovative doctrine of phenomenology directed to transcend “reality” in a more general essence. Husserl’s tradition can be tracked as an idea for philosophy to be reinterpreted in a way to be both generalized and mathematized. The paper offers a pattern borrowed from the theory of information and quantum information to formalize logically a few key concepts of Husserl’s phenomenology such as “epoché” “eidetic, phenomenological, and transcendental reductions” as well as the identification of “phenomenological, transcendental, and psychological reductions” in a way allowing for that identification to be continued to “eidetic reduction” (and thus to mathematics). A basic conclusion states for the unification of philosophy, mathematics, and physics in their foundations and fundamentals to be the Husserl tradition both tracked to its origin and embodied in the development of human cognition in the third millennium.

Keywords

epoché
Hilbert arithmetic
Husserl reductions
information and quantum information
qubit Hulbert space

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