MRC_Hans
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2002
- Messages
- 24,961
Prestige says he agrees.
If people say "You are right" or "I agree on this point", or something similar, then you can assume they agree. But then you don't have to ask.
Hans
Prestige says he agrees.
- How about this? H and ~H are talking about the same experience of "identity" -- H thinks it's an illusion, ~H thinks it's real.
- My claim is that if I'm not brought back to life, my copy isn't perfect.
Hans,
- If my copy did't bring ME back to life, it would not involve my particular sense of self -- there would be something missing. The old VW had no sense of self to be missing in its perfect copy.
No, I don't. I don't agree, and I don't say I agree.Prestige says he agrees.
- What are the Volk's emergent properties?
Or the sound of the running engine (a thought which had occurred to me way back). Every functioning VW would make a unique engine sound while running and if that VW were perfectly copied, it'd make the exact same engine sound as the original. Just like people.Going 60 mph, for one.
Are you the same person waking as you were before falling asleep?- My claim is that if I'm not brought back to life, my copy isn't perfect.
1. A perfect copy of you would have its own sense of self identical to yours. It wouldn't be "missing" any sense of self. You're begging the question that your sense of self is special and that a duplicate of you that had its own identical sense of self is therefore missing something. It isn't.Hans,
- If my copy did't bring ME back to life, it would not involve my particular sense of self -- there would be something missing. The old VW had no sense of self to be missing in its perfect copy.
Yes, exactly.1. A perfect copy of you would have its own sense of self identical to yours. It wouldn't be "missing" any sense of self. You're begging the question that your sense of self is special and that a duplicate of you that had its own identical sense of self is therefore missing something. It isn't.
2. You're special pleading that a sense of self is something special that makes humans stand out from everything else in the universe, and that therefore analogies with other objects with their own emergent properties don't work because those emergent properties aren't the sense of self that you think is special and different to other emergent properties. Under H, there's nothing special about our sense of self as opposed to other emergent properties.
3. Volkswagens have their own properties like shape or gas mileage. You can duplicate perfectly a VW and it will have it's own shape and gas mileage that's identical to the original. The duplicate VW is no more "missing" the shape or the original or the gas mileage of the original any more than a duplicate of you is "missing" your sense of self.
This is all just question begging and special pleading about your sense of self, simply asserting its specialness because you believe so, that it's different to all other emergent properties and therefore plays by its own rules that means you can conclude all sorts of things about it, that aren't justified at all, other than you simply assert and believe them to be true.
The difference is in your definition of being brought back to life, which is taylor-made to try and exclude materialism.
The materialistic definition is that you feel and act alive and recognize your own identity. Under that definition you are brought back to life.
But it is irrelevant. Your task is to prove H wrong, not to speculate about definitions.
How so?Hmm. It seems that something is missing from that definition.
I currently fit that definition. I have been brought to life. I feel and act alive and recognize my own identity. But the definition seems somehow superfluous.
OK, I see the problem. There is no way to tell the difference between being brought to life and being brought back to life, because there is no difference.
It isn't that something is missing from your definition, it is that something has been superfluously added - the word "back".
Being brought to life and being brought back to life are the same. You wake up. You're there. You might be a bear, but whatever you are, it's you.
OTOH, if an exact copy of a dead you wakes up, you're not there, and it's not you.
Why are you personalizing this? Recall it was Jabba who claims he has proof of immortality. His claim, his burden. MRC_Hans has no burden, self-appointed or not, so I fail to see why you're insulting him (with this and the rest of your post).Which makes your task ridiculously easy. Too easy. You should be made to dig a ditch or something, to compensate for your self-appointed task being far too easy.
How so?
Why are you personalizing this?
The copy would bring YOU back to life. There would be no way (expect by observation of the copy process) to distinguish YOU before and YOU after.
No, I don't. I don't agree, and I don't say I agree.
However, there is a point of potential agreement between us. I have described that point clearly. As long as you refuse to describe that point with equal clarity, you and I absolutely do not agree.
I gave you an opportunity for clear agreement in my last reply to you. You repaid me by ignoring the opportunity and lying about my position.
How is what so?
I was just saying that whatever fits MRC_Hans definition of you is you, irrespective of what form it takes. Even if it's a bear.
But something that is not you is not you, even if it is physically identical to some dead former you.
This is tautological.
Because I'm a cranky bastard, and this balderdash
should require a ditch to be dug.
jond,
- That there are two necessary conditions at the top level of cause and effect under ~H, and only one under H, does not make H more likely than ~H.
You are giving two conditions: Jabba came into existence out of an infinite pool and Jabba was ensouled with a soul specific to Jabba that is seperable from him.
They're two different things. The fact that you exist is far more likely than the fact that you exist with an immortal soul.
Hmm. It seems that something is missing from that definition.
I currently fit that definition. I have been brought to life. I feel and act alive and recognize my own identity.
But the definition seems somehow superfluous.
OK, I see the problem. There is no way to tell the difference between being brought to life and being brought back to life, because there is no difference.
It isn't that something is missing from your definition, it is that something has been superfluously added - the word "back".
Being brought to life and being brought back to life are the same. You wake up. You're there. You might be a bear, but whatever you are, it's you.
OTOH, if an exact copy of a dead you wakes up, you're not there, and it's not you.
Which makes your task ridiculously easy. Too easy. You should be made to dig a ditch or something, to compensate for your self-appointed task being far too easy.
And Jabba's task...well, I'll just say next to impossible. It's kind of boring. Like watching a game of "king of the hill" where the "hill" is a sheer cliff, and you're sitting at the top of the cliff waiting for Jabba to impossibly scale it, occasionally yelling down to Jabba that' he's never going to make it.
Even if Jabba were to somehow prove H wrong (about a possibility of immortality), I confidently assert that you would fail to understand the proof, automatically deny it, and no one would be the wiser.
I was just saying that whatever fits MRC_Hans definition of you is you, irrespective of what form it takes. Even if it's a bear.
But something that is not you is not you, even if it is physically identical to some dead former you.
This is tautological.
Argumemnon,
- Read that again. The experience does exist under H. The interpretation of the experience is what differs between the two hypotheses.
- That under H my current existence is virtually zero and that I'm a legitimate target.
...
To anyone: am I making sense here?