Skip to content

The Structure of Scientific Socialism: Quantum Emergence, Frustration, and the Non-Dual Dialectic

S. Roy

March 29, 2026 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

This paper argues that classical Marxism's reliance on 19th-century Newtonian materialism is outdated, and proposes a new framework for scientific socialism by synthesizing modern condensed matter physics with Advaita Vedanta philosophy. Concepts like geometric frustration and competing interactions in spin-glasses and Mott insulators are used to suggest that social stasis and synthesis are emergent properties of a universal consciousness field, not mechanical inevitabilities. The quantum-informed dialectic aims to resolve the tension between individual and collective, echoing the unity intuited by Schrodinger and Heisenberg.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Social stasis and synthesis are emergent properties of a universal consciousness field, not mechanical inevitabilities.

Abstract

Classical Marxism and the algebra of revolution were formulated within the ontological constraints of 19th-century Newtonian materialism-a world of discrete, predictable, billiard-ball interactions. However, the 20th-century transitions in physics, from Thomas Kuhn's paradigm shifts to Phil Anderson's philosophy of emergence, have dismantled the reductionist foundations of this mechanical worldview. This paper proposes a New Manifesto for Scientific Socialism by synthesizing modern condensed matter physics with the non-dual philosophy of Advaita Vedanta. By examining the concepts of Geometric Frustration and Competing Interactions through the lens of Spin-Glasses and Mott Insulators, we argue that social stasis and synthesis are emergent properties of a universal consciousness field rather than mechanical inevitabilities. We further explore how this quantum-informed dialectic resolves the essential tension between the individual and the collective, echoing the intuitions of Schrodinger and Heisenberg regarding the foundational unity of reality.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment