rocketdodger
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2005
- Messages
- 6,946
Perhaps some day you will be comfortable enough to share it.
$50 on "behaviorist"
Do I win, Merc?
Perhaps some day you will be comfortable enough to share it.
'Dodger, my objection was simply that the problem as stated required killing someone. The fact that another person was created did not suddenly mean that the person who is killed, is suddenly not killed.
Perhaps some day you will be comfortable enough to share it.
I would have guessed monist but I like pragmatist.$50 on "behaviorist"
Do I win, Merc?
I am guessing D2 would be the type of data structure that blurs the distinction between classes and their objects.
Namely, any instances of C (D2) would instantly become their own <whatever> due to modification of the underlying structures. Is there even a name for a class who's instances can change their own metadata? Once a class does so, is it still the same class? Is it a different class that inherits from the first and only exists in a single instance?
If the source code for executable doesn't exist, are the instances of classes in the executable actually the abstract classes themselves? If not, do the abstract classes not even exist? If a class doesn't exist, how can there be an instance of it?
I know people do research on this kind of stuff -- executable code that modifies itself. What do they call such a thing?
'Dodger, my objection was simply that the problem as stated required killing someone. The fact that another person was created did not suddenly mean that the person who is killed, is suddenly not killed.
Does "modest proposal" mean that was a parody? If not, then note that you have defined exactly one type of class relationship - the isomorphism. Decompose two objects into sets which have isomorphisms, and the two objects are isomorphic. Then it's turtles the rest of the way down. Never gets weaker unless there is at least one defined non-isomorphic class relationship.Indeed - understanding type becomes a lot harder the more mutable your objects are.
My own modest proposal is that:
*) Every unique instance of an object is also a unique class.
*) The strongest class relationships are between objects that have isomorphic functions
*) The weakest class relationships are between objects that be be decomposed into sets of objects which share strong class relationships
*) The more layers of decomposition you have to go through the weaker the relationship is
You may believe what you wish. The fact that it bears no relation to my thinking on it would bother some people, but if you have no trouble with it, more power to you. I had even, in the other thread, given my conditions for entering the machine--they have nothing to do with your allegations of what my objections are, but if you wish for whatever reason to claim cowardice on my part as the reason, and ignore the people on the other thread who either understood, or felt the same way (such as Darat), I really don't much care.I consider this argument manipulative and as usual subtly attempting to avoid the real crux of the thought experiment. You seem to me to constantly resort to emotive manipulation when you don't want to look at the issue.
Merc, you constantly come out with this whole "Someone dies...and I care" routine, like you're standing up for the rights of man or something. I don't believe a word of this BS. You're just scared to look and you don't want to admit it. I have to put it out.
Nick
Decompose two objects into sets which have isomorphisms, and the two objects are isomorphic.
Now hold on just a durn minute here. Pragmatism is really an epistemological stance, not an ontological one. The rules of the game are that you have to declare an ontological stance, or else you ain't playin' fair. Just because you think it may be meaningless to ask what ultimate reality is don't mean you get to say so.Mercutio said:'Dodger, you owe me fifty bucks. (and now that there is incentive...) Although Radical Behaviorism (not simply "Behaviorist" or "Behaviorism", because there are several schools of behaviorism) is indeed a philosophy, and it would indeed be accurate and acceptable to call me that, the broader category I was thinking of was Pragmatist.
I'm a hopeless romantic. A lover not a fighter.The rules of the game are that you have to declare an ontological stance, or else you ain't playin' fair.
Pragmatically, the moment there is one iota difference between the monisms, there is reason to choose one. Until then, the question is utterly irrelevant. Or, to quote myself: Ontology is, largely, a pantload.Now hold on just a durn minute here. Pragmatism is really an epistemological stance, not an ontological one. The rules of the game are that you have to declare an ontological stance, or else you ain't playin' fair. Just because you think it may be meaningless to ask what ultimate reality is don't mean you get to say so.
~~ Paul
As for the "crux of the thought experiment", I addressed that earlier--it is "resolved" one way or the other based purely on one's initial assumptions. Assume materialism, conclude materialism; assume dualism, conclude dualism. It is a boring thought problem, so I thought I'd actually give my real answer rather than engage in the circular-reasoning-fest.
My reasoning is perfectly reasonable; if you need to reject it in order to claim that you have "resolved" the problem, then you have not resolved the problem.
If I look assuming X, I see Z. If I look assuming Y, I see Y.Hi Merc,
And, for me, you and Darat do cop out. You don't think it's a good thought experiment, if I recall, but then I don't see either of you actually engage with it. I don't think you even dare to look.
Nick
...snip...
And, for me, you and Darat do cop out. You don't think it's a good thought experiment, if I recall, but then I don't see either of you actually engage with it. I don't think you even dare to look.
Nick
I wasn't involved in the other thread and I've not read all of the posts in this one so if my posts are redundant please ignore.
I got to thinking of Mercutio's point about killing a person and it got me thinking. In order to perform a heart transplant you have to, sorta, kill someone. We seem to be ok with that so what line is being crossed with the transporter that causes some of us discomfort?
...snip...
What if person A had a terminal disease that didn't effect the brain and what if person B was in a persistent vegetative state and it were possible to perform a brain transplant from person A to person B? Would that be ok?
...snip...
Is that a line that we could come to accept? What if the transporter could create a clone free of disease? And if the transporter worked by disassembling every atom and then rebuilding the body from those atoms how is that not killing a person?
Again, sorry if this is old hat.