A non-physical entity, in ontology and the philosophy of mind, refers to any existent thing that lacks physical composition, such as matter or energy, and does not occupy space or time, distinguishing it from tangible objects governed by physical laws.[1] These entities are characterized by properties like mentality, abstraction, or immateriality, and are not themselves subject to the laws of physics; while some, such as abstract objects, do not interact with the physical world, others are posited to do so in ways not governed by physical laws or amenable to empirical measurement.[2] Examples include the human mind or soul in substance dualism, where the soul is a non-extended "thinking substance" capable of conscious states independent of bodily processes,[1] and abstract objects in Platonism, such as mathematical entities like numbers, which exist timelessly and non-spatially outside the physical realm or human cognition.[3]In metaphysics, non-physical entities challenge physicalism—the view that everything is ultimately physical or supervenes on the physical—by raising questions about causation, identity, and existence.[4] Substance dualism, as articulated by René Descartes, posits that non-physical minds causally interact with physical bodies, enabling phenomena like intentional action, though this interaction poses problems for conservation laws in physics.[1] Conversely, non-reductive physicalism attempts to accommodate irreducible mental properties without committing to fully non-physical substances, suggesting minds as "hybrid" bearers of both physical and non-physical aspects.[4] Debates often center on whether such entities can be known through reason or intuition rather than sensory experience, as their non-spatial nature precludes direct observation.[3]The concept extends beyond philosophy of mind to broader ontological inquiries, including the status of universals, propositions, and possible worlds, which are frequently treated as non-physical to explain their necessary, unchanging nature.[5] Critics, including nominalists, argue against their existence, claiming that positing non-physical entities leads to explanatory gaps or violates parsimony principles like Ockham's razor, favoring concrete, physical accounts of reality.[6] Nonetheless, proponents maintain that non-physical entities are indispensable for accounting for intentionality, mathematical truth, and qualitative experiences (qualia) that resist physical reduction.[4] Ongoing research in analytic philosophy continues to refine these ideas, balancing empirical science with metaphysical reasoning.[2]
Definition and Overview
Core Definition
A non-physical entity is defined as an entity that lacks spatial extension, mass, or any material composition, and operates independently of the causal laws governing the physical world.[7] Such entities do not interact with physical objects through forces like gravity or electromagnetism, though some philosophical views, such as substance dualism, posit causal interactions in other ways; they exist outside spatiotemporal locations.[7][8]The ontological status of non-physical entities remains a central debate in metaphysics. Under platonic realism, these entities are posited as objectively real and mind-independent, existing in a realm beyond the physical; for instance, numbers are viewed as timeless universals that mathematical truths describe.[9] In contrast, nominalism treats them as ideal constructs or mere linguistic conveniences without independent existence, denying their status as genuine entities.[7] Examples include thoughts, which are non-spatial mental contents, and propositions, which convey truth values without physical embodiment.[7]Physical entities, by comparison, are concrete objects that occupy positions in space-time, possess mass or energy, and participate in causal interactions governed by physical laws, such as particles in quantum fields or macroscopic bodies like planets.[7] Non-physical entities, however, elude such empirical detection and measurement, distinguishing them fundamentally from the observable material world.[10]Immanuel Kant's distinction between noumena—things-in-themselves existing independently of sensory perception and thus beyond physical determination—and phenomena, the appearances shaped by human cognition, has influenced later idealist and metaphysical inquiries into immaterial realities.[11]
Classification and Types
Non-physical entities are classified primarily based on their ontological status relative to the physical world and human cognition, particularly through criteria such as causal efficacy, spatial location, and dependence on minds. A key distinction lies between mind-independent entities, which exist objectively without requiring conscious minds for their instantiation, and mind-dependent entities, which arise from or are constituted by mental activity.[7] This classification helps delineate non-physical entities from physical ones, emphasizing their lack of spatiotemporal presence and inability to interact causally in the manner of material objects.[8]The primary types of non-physical entities include abstract objects, mental phenomena, and immaterial substances. Abstract objects represent the paradigmatic mind-independent category, encompassing entities like mathematical structures that are neither mental nor sensible but exist in a "third realm."[7] Examples include numbers and sets, which are posited as necessary for mathematical truths independent of human thought; propositions, which are truth-bearing abstract contents of sentences; universals, such as the property of "redness" shared across instances; and tropes, which are particularized instances of properties, like the specific redness of a given apple.[7] These objects are classified as non-physical due to their acausality and non-spatiality, though debates persist on whether all abstracts are strictly mind-independent, with some like abstract artifacts (e.g., the structure of a novel) potentially relying on human creation.[7]Mental phenomena constitute a mind-dependent type, involving subjective experiences and intentional states that lack physical extension. Qualia, the phenomenal "what it is like" aspects of consciousness—such as the felt quality of pain or the vividness of seeing red—are often regarded as non-physical because they resist complete physical description and appear irreducible to brain states.[12] Intentions, as directed mental states toward goals or objects, similarly exemplify this category, functioning through representational content without material embodiment. Unlike abstracts, these phenomena are inherently tied to individual minds, ceasing with the mind's dissolution, yet they challenge physicalism by suggesting non-physical properties of experience.[12]Immaterial substances form another core type, posited as enduring, non-extended entities that underpin personal identity or agency beyond the body. Souls, in preliminary philosophical senses, are exemplary, conceived as simple, indivisible substances capable of thought and volition without material composition.[13] This classification draws from substance dualist traditions, where such entities are distinguished from both abstracts (lacking intentionality) and mental phenomena (which may be properties rather than substances).[8]Boundaries of classification exclude purely fictional entities, such as mythical creatures, from ontological commitment as non-physical unless reconceived as abstract objects like propositions or universals, avoiding positing unsubstantiated existents.[7] This taxonomic approach underscores shared attributes like non-causality across types while highlighting unique features, such as the atemporal necessity of abstracts versus the episodic subjectivity of mental phenomena.
Philosophical Perspectives
Historical Development
The concept of non-physical entities originated in ancient Greek philosophy, where Plato developed his theory of Forms in dialogues such as the Republic and Phaedo, positing these as eternal, unchanging ideals that exist in a non-physical realm separate from the sensible world of particulars.[14] These Forms serve as the true realities, with physical objects merely participating in or imitating them imperfectly.[9]Aristotle, in contrast, rejected Plato's transcendent Forms but introduced universals as common properties abstracted from sensible particulars through intellectual apprehension, viewing them as immanent yet non-physical essences that explain similarity among individuals.[15]In the medieval period, Thomas Aquinas synthesized Platonic and Aristotelian ideas with Christian theology in works like the Summa Theologica, arguing that the human intellect is an immaterial faculty capable of abstracting universals from material forms and contemplating divine, non-physical truths.[16] Aquinas maintained that while primary substances are composite of matter and form, the intellect operates independently as a subsistent, immaterial power, bridging the gap between the physical creation and eternal ideas in the divine mind.[16]The Enlightenment marked a pivotal turn with René Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy (1641), where his foundational "cogito ergo sum" ("I think, therefore I am") established the thinking self as a non-extended, indivisible substance distinct from the extended, divisible substance of body.[17] This cogito argument positioned the mind as inherently non-physical, relying on clear and distinct ideas to affirm its independence from sensory deception and material extension.[8]In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (1781) introduced a critical distinction between phenomena—the physical world as structured by space, time, and human categories—and noumena, the non-physical things-in-themselves that remain unknowable beyond appearances.[11] Later, Gottlob Frege's logicist program in The Foundations of Arithmetic (1884) and Basic Laws of Arithmetic (1893) treated numbers as objective, abstract entities grasped through logical analysis, independent of psychological or physical origins.[18]This progression illustrates key transitions from ancient metaphysical realism, which affirmed non-physical entities as robustly existent, toward the analytic philosophy of the early 20th century, exemplified by figures like Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein, where focus shifted to clarifying such concepts via logical structure and linguistic analysis rather than ontological commitment alone.[19]
Abstract Objects in Philosophy
In philosophy, abstract objects are posited as non-physical entities that lack spatiotemporal location and causal powers, yet play a central role in ontological debates about the nature of reality. These include mathematical entities like numbers, universals such as properties or relations, and propositions, which are distinguished from concrete particulars by their mind-independence or conceptual status in various theories.[7] The existence of such objects raises profound questions in ontology regarding their independence from the physical world and human cognition, influencing fields from mathematics to ethics without relying on empirical verification.Platonism asserts that abstract objects exist independently in a non-spatiotemporal realm, accessible through reason rather than perception. This view, echoing ancient roots but developed in modern terms, argues that abstracts are real entities on par with physical objects. A key defense is the indispensability argument, which holds that since mathematics, involving abstract objects like numbers and sets, is indispensable to our best scientific theories, we must commit to the existence of these abstracts to account for scientific success.[20] Willard Van Orman Quine advanced this position in the 1940s, contending that ontological commitment follows from the quantifiers in theoretical discourse, such that "there are numbers" is warranted if mathematics is empirically indispensable.[21]In contrast, nominalism denies the independent existence of abstract objects, treating them as linguistic conventions or mere names without ontological status. Nominalists argue that references to abstracts can be eliminated or reconstructed in favor of concrete particulars or predicates, avoiding unnecessary positing of non-physical entities. Nelson Goodman, in collaboration with Quine, critiqued abstracta as superfluous, proposing a "calculus of individuals" where qualities and relations are analyzed through concrete spatio-temporal occurrences rather than eternal forms. This approach underscores nominalism's parsimony, viewing abstracts as artifacts of language rather than mind-independent realities.[22]Conceptualism offers a middle ground, maintaining that abstract objects exist but only as mental constructs within the mind, dependent on perception or thought for their reality.Epistemological challenges to abstract objects center on the problem of access: if abstracts are non-physical and acausal, how do humans acquire knowledge of them? Paul Benacerraf articulated this issue in his 1973 analysis of mathematical truth, arguing that causal theories of knowledge—requiring a causal relation between knower and known—fail for abstracta, as numbers or sets cannot interact causally with the physical world.[23] This dilemma questions the reliability of mathematical intuition or rational insight, prompting debates over whether non-causal epistemologies, like rationalism, suffice or if alternatives like fictionalism better resolve the tension.Abstract objects find applications in semantics, where propositions are treated as mind- and language-independent entities that serve as the meanings of sentences, enabling truth-conditional semantics.[7] In this framework, a proposition like "snow is white" is an abstract object that remains the same across utterances, accounting for shared understanding without reducing to mental states. Similarly, in ethics, moral universals—such as the property of goodness or justice—are posited as abstract objects to ground objective moral facts, allowing moral realism to claim that ethical truths hold independently of individual beliefs or cultural conventions.[7] This supports theories where moral properties inhere in actions or states, providing a non-physical basis for normative universality.
Dualism and Metaphysics
Mind-Body Dualism
Mind-body dualism posits that the mind and body constitute two fundamentally distinct substances, with the mind serving as a paradigmatic example of a non-physical entity capable of independent existence. This doctrine was most prominently formulated by René Descartes (1596–1650), who in his Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) argued that the essence of the mind is thought, a non-extended activity, while the essence of the body is extension in space, a mechanical property devoid of thought.[8] Descartes' substance dualism thus separates mental phenomena, such as consciousness and intentionality, from purely physical processes, establishing the mind as an immaterial substance.[24]Central to Descartes' framework is interactionism, the view that mind and body causally influence one another despite their ontological differences. He proposed that this interaction occurs specifically in the pineal gland, a small structure in the brain where "animal spirits"—fine streams of material particles—facilitate the exchange between mental volitions and bodily motions, as elaborated in The Passions of the Soul (1649).[24] This mechanism aimed to reconcile the mind's non-spatial nature with its evident control over physical actions, such as willing a limb to move.[8]Proponents of mind-body dualism have advanced several arguments to support the mind's non-physical status. The conceivability argument, rooted in Descartes' method of doubt, maintains that one can clearly and distinctly conceive of the mind existing without the body (and vice versa), implying their real distinction; this is reinforced by Leibniz's law of the identity of indiscernibles, which dictates that if the mind lacks spatial properties possessed by the body, they cannot be identical substances.[8][25] Additionally, the knowledge argument highlights introspective access to non-physical qualia—the subjective, "what-it-is-like" aspects of experience—suggesting that such phenomenal properties are irreducible to objective physical descriptions, as they are known directly through consciousness rather than empirical observation.[26]Despite these supports, mind-body dualism faces significant criticisms, particularly the interaction problem: explaining how an immaterial mind can exert causal influence on a material body without disrupting conservation laws of motion and energy.[8] This challenge was sharply articulated by Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia in her correspondence with Descartes beginning in 1643, where she questioned how a non-extended soul could "move" an extended body, likening it to the impossibility of a disembodied hand pushing a physical object.[27][28] Descartes struggled to resolve this in his replies, ultimately appealing to divine orchestration, but the objection underscored the explanatory gap between substances.[24]To address the interaction problem, variants of dualism emerged, including occasionalism as developed by Nicolas Malebranche (1638–1715) in works like The Search After Truth (1674–1675). In this view, no direct causal interaction occurs between mind and body; instead, God serves as the sole true cause, producing physical effects in response to mental states (and vice versa) on every "occasion," thereby preserving the substances' separation while accounting for apparent correlations.[29][8]
Substance Dualism vs. Property Dualism
Substance dualism maintains that reality consists of two fundamentally distinct kinds of substances: the mental or thinking substance, known as res cogitans, which is non-spatial, indivisible, and characterized by consciousness and thought, and the physical or extended substance, res extensa, which possesses spatial dimensions, divisibility, and mechanical properties. This view, often associated with René Descartes' framework, posits that minds and bodies are ontologically separate entities that interact causally, with the mind influencing bodily actions and vice versa.[30] However, substance dualism faces significant challenges from modern physics, particularly the apparent violation of conservation laws such as the conservation of energy and momentum, which require that causal interactions within closed physical systems preserve total energy without external non-physical inputs.[31] Critics argue that mental causation from a non-physical substance would introduce or remove energy from the physical realm without accounting for its source or destination, rendering the interaction problem unresolved under empirical physical principles.[32]In contrast, property dualism asserts that there is only one fundamental kind of substance—physical—but that this substance instantiates both physical properties (such as mass and charge) and irreducibly non-physical properties (such as phenomenal consciousness or qualia).[33] Philosopher David Chalmers defends a version of property dualism termed "naturalistic dualism," where conscious experience arises through natural supervenience: mental properties depend on and are determined by physical properties and laws, yet they are not logically or metaphysically reducible to them, allowing for a unified ontology without separate substances. This approach circumvents the interaction issues of substance dualism by locating non-physicality at the level of properties rather than substances, thereby preserving physical conservation laws while accommodating the causal efficacy of mental states as emergent features of physical systems.The key differences between substance and property dualism lie in their ontological commitments: substance dualism requires two primitive categories of being (mental and physical substances), leading to a more radical pluralism that struggles with causal integration, whereas property dualism commits to a monistic substance ontology with a dualistic property profile, treating non-physical properties as higher-level emergents that supervene on physical bases without introducing new substances.[33] A prominent argument supporting property dualism is Chalmers' zombie thought experiment, which posits that a physically identical duplicate of a conscious being (a "philosophical zombie") lacking phenomenal experience is conceivable without contradiction, implying that consciousness does not supervene logically on physical facts and thus requires non-physical properties. This conceivability argument challenges reductive physicalism and bolsters property dualism by highlighting the metaphysical possibility of dissociated physical and mental realms at the property level.In contemporary philosophy of mind, property dualism exerts significant influence, particularly through variants like epiphenomenalism, which holds that non-physical mental properties are causally inert byproducts of physical processes—caused by brain states but exerting no downward causal influence—thus resolving overdetermination worries while maintaining dualistic properties.[34]Epiphenomenalism, as a property dualist position, underscores the framework's flexibility in addressing mental causation debates, though it invites criticism for undermining the evolutionary utility of consciousness.[35] Overall, these dualisms provide contrasting metaphysical tools for conceptualizing non-physical entities, with property dualism gaining traction for its compatibility with scientific naturalism.
Religious and Spiritual Entities
Souls and Afterlife Concepts
In Abrahamic traditions, the soul is often conceptualized as an immortal, non-physical essence that serves as the seat of reason, morality, and personal identity, surviving bodily death to face divine judgment or resurrection. In Christianity, this view draws from New Testament teachings on the resurrection of the body, where the soul's immortality enables reunion with a glorified physical form, as articulated by early Church Fathers like Augustine, who integrated Platonic ideas of the soul's eternity into doctrine by the 5th century CE. Similarly, in Islam, the Qur'an describes the ruh (spirit or soul) as a divine breath from God, infused into humans to grant life and moral agency, with its immortality affirmed in verses promising accountability in the afterlife, a concept central to the text revealed in the 7th century CE. These traditions emphasize the soul's role in ethical discernment, distinguishing humans from mere animals and ensuring continuity of the self beyond death.Eastern religious perspectives present contrasting yet profound views on the non-physical self and its persistence. In Hinduism, the atman represents the eternal, unchanging self or soul, identical with the ultimate reality (Brahman), as expounded in the Upanishads, ancient philosophical texts composed around 800–500 BCE, which describe it as the immortal core that transmigrates through cycles of birth and rebirth until liberation (moksha). In contrast, Buddhism rejects an eternal soul, teaching anatta (no-self) as one of the three marks of existence, asserting that what appears as a persistent self is an illusion arising from impermanent aggregates (form, sensation, perception, mental formations, and consciousness), a doctrine originating in the Pali Canon attributed to the Buddha in the 5th century BCE. This anatta doctrine underscores the absence of an inherent, unchanging essence, promoting detachment to end suffering rather than affirming personal immortality.Afterlife concepts tied to these souls highlight diverse mechanisms for continuity and judgment. In ancient Egyptian religion, dating back to around 2000 BCE during the Middle Kingdom, the soul comprised dual aspects: the ka, a vital life force remaining with the body, and the ba, a mobile personality that could journey to the afterlife, requiring rituals to unite them for eternal existence in the Duat, as detailed in funerary texts like the Coffin Texts. Reincarnation features prominently in Indian traditions, such as Jainism's samsara, the cyclical wheel of rebirth driven by karma, where the jiva (soul) migrates through innumerable lives across realms until achieving liberation through asceticism, a belief codified in early Jain scriptures from the 6th century BCE onward. These implications link the non-physical soul to moral causation, with judgment or rebirth determining the soul's trajectory based on earthly actions.Philosophical integration of soul concepts with personal identity appears in John Locke's empiricist framework in his 1690 work, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, where he proposes a memory-based theory tying personal identity to consciousness rather than substance, allowing for the soul's immortality while grounding selfhood in recollected experiences, thus bridging religious notions of an enduring soul with psychological continuity. Locke argues that "personal identity depends on consciousness," enabling the same self to persist across bodily changes or even without invoking a materialist soul, though he accommodates immaterialist views prevalent in Christian theology of his era. This approach influenced later debates on how non-physical entities preserve identity in afterlife scenarios, emphasizing subjective awareness over metaphysical substance.
Supernatural Beings
Supernatural beings represent a diverse array of non-physical entities revered or feared in religious and folk traditions worldwide, often serving as intermediaries between the divine and human realms or as independent agents influencing earthly events. These entities are typically depicted as incorporeal yet capable of exerting will and effect, manifesting through visions, interventions, or direct encounters that transcend physical laws. In Abrahamic faiths, they include benevolent messengers and malevolent adversaries, while in polytheistic and animistic systems, they embody natural forces or ancestral presences.In Judaism and Christianity, angels function as divine messengers, with the archangel Gabriel exemplifying this role by interpreting prophetic visions for Daniel in the Hebrew Bible (Daniel 8:16; 9:21) and announcing the births of John the Baptist and Jesus in the New Testament (Luke 1:19, 26-38).[36][37] Demons, conversely, act as adversarial forces opposing divine order; in Islam, Iblis embodies this opposition, refusing God's command to prostrate before Adam out of arrogance, thereby becoming the leader of rebellious spirits known as shayatin (Quran, SurahAl-Baqarah 2:34).[38]Polytheistic traditions feature spirits closely tied to natural phenomena and guardianship duties. In Hinduism, devas are benevolent supernatural beings portrayed in the Rig Veda as protectors of cosmic and natural order, such as Indra guarding the skies and waters from chaos.[39] Similarly, in Shinto folklore, yokai emerge as enigmatic spirits inhabiting landscapes, with early references in 8th-century texts like the Nihon Shoki describing them as shape-shifting entities that disrupt or aid human affairs, reflecting animistic views of the environment.[40]Ghostly apparitions often manifest as ancestral or restless spirits in folk traditions. African Vodun practices venerate loa—intermediary spirits derived from WestAfrican ancestral and natural forces—that guide or possess devotees during rituals to offer wisdom or protection, blending pre-colonial Dahomean beliefs with diasporic adaptations.[41] Poltergeists, reported across global folklore from European tales to Asian legends, appear as disruptive, object-moving entities tied to unresolved humanemotions or locations, creating audible chaos without visible form.[42]Across these traditions, supernatural beings share key attributes of incorporeality, allowing existence beyond material constraints, and independent agency that enables purposeful actions despite lacking physical bodies.[43] They interact with the world through extraordinary means, such as performing miracles to alter natural events or inducing possession to communicate directly with humans, thereby bridging the seen and unseen realms.[44]
Modern and Scientific Interpretations
In Information and Digital Realms
In contemporary information theory and digital contexts, information is often conceptualized as a non-physical entity, distinct from its physical substrates like storage media. Philosopher Luciano Floridi argues that humans and other agents are increasingly integrated into an "infosphere"—a vast informational environment—transforming them into "inforgs," or informational organisms that process and exchange data as their primary mode of existence.[45] This view posits that information's essence lies in its abstract structure and semantic content, rather than its material instantiation; for instance, a bit represents a binary choice of states (0 or 1) that conveys meaning independently of the electrons or magnetic fields used to encode it physically.[2]Digital entities further exemplify non-physicality through software objects and virtual constructs in artificial intelligence. In computer science ontology, software is treated as an abstract layer separate from hardware, comprising algorithms, data structures, and executable code that define behaviors without inherent physical form. Virtual agents in AI, such as autonomous bots or simulated characters, operate as immaterial processes manipulating symbolic representations, enabling interactions in virtual environments that mimic agency despite lacking corporeal presence. Blockchain technology extends this by creating immutable ledgers as non-local entities: distributed across networks, these ledgers maintain tamper-proof records through cryptographic consensus, existing as consensus-driven abstractions rather than centralized physical artifacts.[46]The ontological status of such digital non-physical entities raises questions about their capacity for genuine understanding or intentionality. John Searle's Chinese Room argument illustrates this by envisioning a person manipulating Chinese symbols according to syntactic rules without comprehending their meaning, mirroring how computers process non-physical syntax (formal symbol manipulation) but fail to achieve semantics (intentional content).[47] This distinction implies that AI systems, reliant on abstract informational processes, may simulate intelligence without possessing true consciousness, challenging claims of digital minds as fully realized non-physical agents.Cryptocurrencies provide a practical example of value-bearing abstract entities, embodying economic worth decoupled from physical tokens like coins or bills. Bitcoin, for instance, functions as a socially constructed, non-concrete digital asset whose value derives from network consensus and cryptographic verification, existing solely in the informational realm of blockchain transactions.[48] This immateriality allows cryptocurrencies to transcend geographical and material constraints, representing a novel form of non-physical property that operates through shared informational protocols rather than tangible possession.[49]
Debates in Consciousness and Physics
In the philosophy of mind, the hard problem of consciousness refers to the challenge of explaining why physical processes in the brain give rise to subjective experiences, or qualia, which appear non-reducible to purely physical descriptions. Philosopher David Chalmers introduced this concept, arguing that even a complete scientific account of neural correlates of consciousness would leave unexplained the "what it is like" aspect of experience, suggesting qualia might constitute a fundamental, non-physical feature of reality.[50] This view contrasts with materialist reductions but aligns with proposals like panpsychism, which posits that consciousness is a basic property inherent in all matter, rather than emerging solely from complex physical systems. Philosopher Philip Goff defends panpsychism as a solution to the hard problem, contending that attributing proto-conscious properties to fundamental particles resolves the explanatory gap without invoking supernatural entities.Debates in physics further intersect with non-physical entities through quantum mechanics, where phenomena challenge classical notions of locality and realism. John Bell's theorem demonstrates that quantum entanglement exhibits non-locality, meaning measurements on separated particles can instantaneously correlate in ways incompatible with local hidden-variable theories, implying a reality that transcends space-time separation and potentially involves observer-independent aspects beyond standard physicalism. Similarly, Hugh Everett's many-worlds interpretation posits that quantum superpositions lead to branching parallel universes, each realizing different outcomes of measurements, which some interpret as generating abstract, non-physical multiplicities of reality that evade collapse into a single physical state.[51]Opposing views in these debates favor emergentism or strict reductionism, denying the need for non-physical entities. Cognitive scientist Daniel Dennett's multiple drafts model describes consciousness as arising from distributed, parallel neural processes without a central "theater" or unified qualia, portraying subjective experience as an illusion emergent from competing informational drafts rather than anything non-physical. Neuroscience supports this through experiments like those of Benjamin Libet in the 1980s, which showed that brain readiness potentials precede conscious awareness of voluntary actions by about 350 milliseconds, suggesting decisions initiate unconsciously and challenging notions of a non-physical, libertarian free will.Interdisciplinary tensions arise in cosmology, where the fine-tuning of physical constants—such as the cosmological constant enabling stable atoms and life—appears improbably precise under naturalistic explanations, prompting arguments for a non-physical intelligence as a designer. This fine-tuning debate, as articulated in philosophical analyses, highlights how such precision might imply teleological purpose beyond random physical laws, though critics counter with multiverse hypotheses to avoid non-physical posits.[52]