The Structure of Scientific Socialism: Quantum Emergence, Frustration, and the Non-Dual Dialectic
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This paper argues that classical Marxism's reliance on 19th-century Newtonian materialism is outdated, and proposes a new framework for scientific socialism by synthesizing modern condensed matter physics with Advaita Vedanta philosophy.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.