Thanks for enjoying my essay. The last section "Several Concluding Insights for Further Research" is laid out such that each successive point explores and overlaps with a wider range of research. Hopefully I can continue to use the comment threads to expand upon those four points, and I'll use this response as part of that.
Point #1 derives a significant conclusion of how a self referential operation applied twice does indeed lead to a definite state. This provides confidence to the physical explanation of one half pulse bringing the qubit into superposition and then another half pulse bringing it back to a definite state; furthermore this gives additional insight not only into the self referential representation for such physical phenomena, but into the physical requirements necessary to understand a self referential operation. Point #1 is thus a direct extension from the previous section which introduces the self referential operation and lays out its significance in seeking the limits of computability. There are some excellent questions raised above expanding on this point which are also part of my research.
Point #2 is already brought out more in the comments above. See in particular the dialogue I have with Lawrence Crowell. This develops into an equivalence between (Godel's) Incompleteness and (Heisenberg's) Uncertainty - in its own right this interfaces math and physics.
Point #3 might be a fun exercise if anything to consider, especially if more rigorously analyzed. It also may tap into how deep the self referential concept lies in the most fundamental understanding of the universe, because a self referential operation so applied suggests a superposition of "MUH compliant" and "not MUH compliant" , but MUH already should incorporate the concept of superposition. If superposition must be invoked even within an explanation that supposedly already incorporates superposition, then this would have to be explained by a theory in which superposition is yet but an emergent concept.
Point #4 aptly then is perhaps the most exploratory but is relevant to consider. I received feedback from others on it and I see there are other essays throughout FQXI forums that touch on consciousness. The key postulate in this point ties consciousness to causality, which is an interesting explanation given that causality is a key requirement for computation. The idea opens the door for discussion on the connection between nonlocality and a deeper understanding of superposition, as well as a thorough explanation of the balancing between nonlocality and statistics in order to maintain causality. I think it then could provide some description of the environment necessary for consciousness along the lines of an anthropic principle - namely that if consciousness is a product of causality, or at least requires it, then a physical universe in which conscious beings such as ourselves exist would be the one in which physical principles can at least be perceived by us to maintain causality.
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Most importantly, it seems that others as well have been interested in these points and helped develop them throughout the threads, so I'm glad to see these ideas pursued and utilized. Including here, I hope to continue in that dialogue.
You mentioned your other comment on the Liar Paradox as separate, so I will address it in another response.