Abstract
The mechanisms underlying consciousness and its potential continuity beyond biological death remain unresolved in neuroscience and philosophy. This study proposes a novel theoretical framework integrating quantum biology, Buddhist psychology, and thought experiments to address these questions. Using three hypothetical scenarios—brain revival, molecular disassembly/reassembly, and synthetic brain replication—we explore whether consciousness arises solely from neural activities, non-material components, like certain micro-particles, or needs both. Results indicate that materialist models (e.g., Orch-OR theory) fail to explain the uniqueness of self-awareness in the ever-changing quality and quantities of the brains, necessitating the introduction of two hypothetical particles. These particles, posited to operate beyond classical physics, may mediate consciousness continuity by bonding with nascent nervous systems at infinite velocities. Empirical experiments on revived pig brains were crucial, here. Importantly, while identical brains under uniform conditions develop distinct consciousnesses, we affirm that determinism remains a valid principle governing these processes. We argue that brain functions, impact X-UQGPC evolution as one-way actions, but not as reactions. It might be the reason that identical persons have greatly similar behaviors. This framework bridges ancient meditative insights with quantum biology, offering testable hypotheses for interdisciplinary research. Findings suggest that optimizing mental practices (e.g., meditation) could enhance global well-being, minimize social and personal issues, and a better afterlife.