This paper presents a speculative theoretical framework exploring whether informationtheoretic and quantum mechanical principles might permit disturbance-free transmission of consciousness-encoded signals across distinct thermodynamic states. The framework introduces Entropy Cadence as a proposed defining identity of any given physical history — a structured rhythm of entropy increase hypothesized to be unique to each branch of reality. We argue, by analogy with established results in quantum decoherence and information theory, that any entropy disturbance introduced by a foreign signal into a destination thermodynamic state would be irresolvable without branching that state. We then propose, speculatively, that if consciousness has a quantum mechanical basis consistent with theories such as Orchestrated Objective Reduction, it may be encodable as a pure quantum state with von Neumann entropy SvN = 0, thereby satisfying a zero-disturbance transmission condition. A pre-embedded quantum medium, created at a threshold time t0, is proposed as the architectural requirement for such transmission. Nine candidate mechanisms are evaluated. The framework produces one near-term testable prediction: that quantum neural activity should exhibit measurably lower von Neumann entropy than equivalent-complexity classical information structures, testable in principle via quantum state tomography of neural signals. All other predictions are conditional on the validity of assumptions that remain unverified. This paper does not claim to prove that timeline navigation is possible. It claims only that the entropy-disturbance framing of the problem is well-motivated and that the quantum consciousness hypothesis, if validated, would have direct implications for the architecture of any such transmission system.
Ujjwal Kumar (Sun,) studied this question.
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