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Classical serotonergic psychedelics (e.g., LSD, psilocybin, DMT) alter perception and neuroplasticity primarily via 5-HT2A receptor activation and downstream Ca 2+ -dependent signaling cascades. Here we propose a speculative yet falsifiable pharmacological hypothesis that these drug-induced biochemical cascades might interface with quantum-mechanical processes in the brain. We focus on nuclear spin dynamics in phosphate-containing biomolecules–calcium phosphate nanoclusters known as “Posner molecules” (Ca 9 (PO 4 ) 6 ) – as a candidate substrate for quantum coherence and entanglement in neural tissue. We distinguish the metaphorical “classical” analogies in psychedelic neuroscience from a literal quantum-level mechanism involving nuclear spin coherence and entanglement. The central hypothesis is that intense 5-HT2A-driven neural activity and Ca 2+ flux during psychedelic exposure foster conditions under which 31 P nuclear spins in phosphate groups may become entangled and shielded from decoherence within Posner molecules and subsequently influence neuronal signaling when these clusters dissolve and release bursts of Ca 2+ in different neuronal compartments. Building on Fisher’s Posner model of quantum cognition, we reframe Posner molecules as a potential quantum-coherence nexus in psychedelic action, de-emphasizing earlier microtubule-centric models and explore how such quantum effects, if they exist, might influence pharmacological outcomes. We outline translational implications of this hypothesis, including potential insights into inter-individual variability in treatment response and novel experimental paradigms for psychiatry. To ensure falsifiability, we propose concrete experimental directions in the short term (isotopically modified psychedelics and xenon environments), medium term (advanced quantum sensors such as nitrogen-vacancy magnetometry and ultrafast spectroscopy), and long term (entangled ligand studies or quantum neuroimaging modalities). While speculative, this interdisciplinary framework generates specific, disprovable predictions. Confirming or refuting the role of quantum-mechanical phenomena in psychedelic neuropharmacology would profoundly impact our understanding of mind-brain relationships and encourage high-reward innovation in psychiatric treatment and brain-targeted drug design.