What if the entire atomic structure of the brain operates as a unique wave function which gives us that feeling of I'ness and when brain activity is interupted/stopped consciousness is unable to manifest itself but on resumption, the wave funtion harmonises with surrounding matter/reality and full consciousness is resumed with restored identity as if no time time had passed for the affected person.
First off, this conversation is doomed to fail if consciousness is not clearly defined. For the purposes of what I'm about to say, I'm treating consciousness as the ability to actively perceive and process outside stimuli. If a person is asleep, their consciousness is decreased.
A single wave function describing a brain would account for all the probablity distributions of energy and position of all the electrons, protons and neutrons making up the variety of cells, as well as electrochemical actitivity.
Problem is, what about blood and oxygen going in and out. What about energy from food. Body temperature as heat. The brain isn't an isolated system by a long shot in the body.
I don't understand how describing a brain as a single wavefunction gives us our oneness or "feeling of I'ness".
Anyway, it sounds like once the brain activity is stopped, the wave function is shut off. Well, no, because the brain is still there. Sure, there's less to no electrical activity with loss of consciousness. But the brain (atoms, electrons) still exists. The wavefunction still exists. Loss of brain activity doesn't mean loss of wavefunction.
Now I'm going to talk about consciousness as a more complex concept (sense of me, perception, sapience):
If we treat consciousness as electrical activity (active communcation between parts of the brain), then things make a lot more sense. Interrupt communication between certain parts, and the qualities of the consciousness change (sense of self, recognition of self, identity, emotions, ability to perceive outside stimuli). This has been widely observed.
Now, how can you suppress all electical activity in the brain? Stop the heart. Starve the brain of oxygen. Starve the cells of nutrients. Suppress sufficient heat to get to the brain. In all cases, destroying the cells that serve to keep that electrical activity going.
If your "wavefunction" for consciousness is electrical activity, and the "surrounding matter/reality" are the cells that generate, conduct, and receive that electrical activity, then your analogy/model kinda works.
However, the electrical activity in the brain and the brain cells themselves really can't be seperated. That's because the processes that keep the cells alive are embedded with the processes that provide the electrical activity. That is, I am not aware of any approach that can shut down all electrical activity in the brain but keep all the brain cells alive. If there is, I'd very much like to hear about it.