four elevener
Master Poster
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2006
- Messages
- 2,919
I got into a discussion with a friend the other day after we watched a movie called The Sixth Man, starring California's governer. For those who haven't seen it: in the film, humans are cloned from "blanks" and with a retina scan, are given the original's memories and personality. Arnold's character even loses a family pete and considers having it cloned at a store in the mall called RePet. Another character has his wife cloned repeatedly in order to find a cure for her cancer. As the clone lays dying in the hospital (aware that she's a clone), she tells the husband that it's time to let her go, that the original died years ago and that she doesn't want to come back anymore.
The legality and morality of the issue and absurdities of the science aside, the movie got me thinking: if in the very distant future, science was able to do just that, and you lost a loved one, would you have him/her cloned? Keep in mind that the clone would look, act, and feel the exact same as the original, retaining their memories, feelings and experiences. To them, they would essentially still be the same person, except having experienced death and returned from it.
I can see the religious not wanting to do so for obvious reasons, but since atheists don't believe in the existance of a soul, how would they reconcile something like that in their mind if they chose to clone a deceased loved one? If you didn't believe in a soul, would you be able to love the clone as if he/she was the original or would the thought always linger in the back of your mind that your original is really dead and buried somewhere? Would you feel any differently about cloning a pet?
On the flip side of the coin, if you were a clone and were brought back by a loved one, how would you feel about yourself, knowing you weren't the original, yet there you are, standing there with all the same feelings, memories, experiences that the original You had? Unlike the concept of cryogenitcally freezing yourself, once you die this you ceases to exist. Only your clone would have the fortune (or misfortune) of experiencing your death and living to remember it, creating new experiences and feelings that he/she will never experience again upon their death, but their clones will...and so forth.
I spose I'm asking several questions here so feel free to answer any or all of them. I'm not suggesting this discussion serves any purpose...it's purely hypothetical, maybe even a little silly, but very interesting to me.
The legality and morality of the issue and absurdities of the science aside, the movie got me thinking: if in the very distant future, science was able to do just that, and you lost a loved one, would you have him/her cloned? Keep in mind that the clone would look, act, and feel the exact same as the original, retaining their memories, feelings and experiences. To them, they would essentially still be the same person, except having experienced death and returned from it.
I can see the religious not wanting to do so for obvious reasons, but since atheists don't believe in the existance of a soul, how would they reconcile something like that in their mind if they chose to clone a deceased loved one? If you didn't believe in a soul, would you be able to love the clone as if he/she was the original or would the thought always linger in the back of your mind that your original is really dead and buried somewhere? Would you feel any differently about cloning a pet?
On the flip side of the coin, if you were a clone and were brought back by a loved one, how would you feel about yourself, knowing you weren't the original, yet there you are, standing there with all the same feelings, memories, experiences that the original You had? Unlike the concept of cryogenitcally freezing yourself, once you die this you ceases to exist. Only your clone would have the fortune (or misfortune) of experiencing your death and living to remember it, creating new experiences and feelings that he/she will never experience again upon their death, but their clones will...and so forth.
I spose I'm asking several questions here so feel free to answer any or all of them. I'm not suggesting this discussion serves any purpose...it's purely hypothetical, maybe even a little silly, but very interesting to me.