Abstract: The hardest technical obstacle facing consciousness-collapse interpretations of quantum mechanics — the quantum Zeno effect — is not a problem with the formalism but an artifact of the ontological framework within which consciousness-collapse models are developed. This essay diagnoses the Zeno problem as framework-dependent: it arises from the assumption, shared by materialism and property dualism alike, that consciousness is a property physical systems may or may not possess — an assumption that generates an emergence threshold the Zeno effect makes uncrossable. Under analytic idealism, where consciousness is the fundamental substrate and finite minds are dissociated fragments of universal consciousness, the assumption does not hold and the problem dissolves. The essay develops a central identification: the dissociative boundary that constitutes a finite mind IS what the quantum formalism describes as measurement, seen from inside rather than outside — not an additional postulate but a consequence of what dissociation already means. This identification dissolves the Zeno problem, eliminates the need for the technical machinery developed to circumvent it, explains why consciousness-collapse and purely physical collapse models yield identical predictions, and reinterprets the Zeno effect as a structural description of attentional constraint rather than a technical obstacle. The argument is conditional — if analytic idealism, then these consequences follow — and constructive, building in the space cleared by this project's diagnostic work on causal closure and asymmetric methodological restraint. Keywords: quantum Zeno effect · consciousness-collapse · analytic idealism · dissociation · measurement problem · integrated information theory · continuous spontaneous localization · super-resistance · mind-at-large · intersubjective regularity Part of the Return to Consciousness research program — 30 philosophical essays exploring consciousness-first metaphysics. Full project: https://returntoconsciousness.org/
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Bruno Tonetto
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Bruno Tonetto (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69eefd15fede9185760d3ca1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19762426
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