Replication of the physical will replicate the contents of the original's consciousness. If the original was conscious of [X], the copy will be conscious of [X]. So we have two separate consciousnesses with the same contents. Twins who happen to be thinking of the same thing.
Yup.
Because each consciousness is not separate from its material instance, destroying a material instance will also destroy the consciousness that depended on it. Or so I would argue, under materialism.
Yup. One version is destroyed.
I think I prefer one "material instance" [of the non-material class that uniquely describes either of the twins] is destroyed. Is one "version" (one description) veering into idealism? In any event, the destruction of either twin should be a concern for everybody who knows them, including the twins.
But I take it the destruction of a twin is irrelevant to you, on your model?
Under idealism, consciousness need no longer be tied to matter. As an "idea", as a descriptive class, it might exist on its own, independent of any material body; disembodied, as it were, And that is all that's being transferred in the teleporter scenario, the "idea", the description of a certain consciousness, to be reembodied somewhere, somewhen else.
That's idealism, the transfer of the "idea" suffices to transfer the particular material instance. Under materialism, nothing that depended on a particular material instance survives its destruction. The description, the idea, the information about the paticular material instance, including the information about the consciousness, survives, but that information, that idea, is not the particular instance of material process it describes.
I still fail to see how any of this has any relevance to idealism.
The assumption that "active consciousness", that is, the state of being conscious, persists as long as its description does is idealism (the idea of something is more than just a description: it is something that exists as much or more than matter, whose instantiations are pale copies of eternal copies: classic idealism). Active consciousness, according to materialism, ceases the moment the material activity we describe as "consciousness" does.
What's being called a logical consequence of Materialism actually requires Idealism.
Whew.

Sorry, Nick. That was much longer than I'd planned; but it's a difficult point, hard to get across without a specialized vocabulary, so hopefully worth the attempts at making in different ways. (And to be clear, I'm not arguing the teleporter is impossible, necessarily; just trying to clarify what the arguments for and against are based on, in terms of traditional philosophy).
But the core of the Transporter is the question - would
you travel? To me all this reference to constructs, fascinating as it might be, also has with it something of a means to avoid the question. Blobru#2 will continue to have all of these issues with the device. Nothing will have changed.
The question is: "Is a particular consciousness limited to blobru#1, or can it be transferred to blobru#2, to continue as the same active consciousness?" It's a fascinating question, which I'm trying to explore from as many semantic angles as I can muster, at least those that seem relevant to me to understanding the question. It's terribly pedantic, and I apologize, but certainly not intended as a means to avoid the question, just my own stumblebum means to grapple with and try to pin it down. As with any philosophical question, a lot if not all of it comes down to arriving at common clear definitions for notoriously hard-to-define words, such as "consciousness" and "materialism". Flat out: if I could, I wouldn't get in the teleporter right now, based on my understanding, which is as fallible as anyone's (with the possible exception of Bubblefish's).
In differentiating idealism and materialism as they apply to the teleporter scenario, [i)-t's the "material instance" I'm concerned with, which isn't a social construct, as far as I can see (though I suppose everything, including logic's terminology for class membership and existence, is a "social construct" at some level).
Well, that's not what I mean. What I'm saying is that the notion of an
experiencer is a social construct. And, usually when you rip it all apart it comes down to the individual believing that there is an experiencing self and that this experiencing self will no longer experience when he/she pushes the Teleport button. This is why I put this in. Because IME this is usually the base belief of the psyche... that this is what will be lost. So for me I would love to learn if this is what you are actually concerned with... that you get in the box push the button and that this supposed self should cease to experience. Is it?
It's the discontinuation/destruction of the uniquely-situated, active material process which gives rise to what we call "consciousness" (my activity, my being actively consciousness) that I'm actually concerned with, whether the "self" of "experiencer" is a grammatical or phenomenological fiction produced by that active process or not.
More plainly, a person is being destroyed at the entry-point of the teleporter; what's worse, it's me (apparently).
Even without the child's game, I wouldn't. But I would be able to determine that we are distinct, and neither of us wants to be destroyed, which is the salient point for the teleporter scenario.
Not really, as I see it. In the scenario only the copy continues. What I would consider more salient here is that you cannot know whether you have been alive for decades or whether you only came into existence 2 seconds ago. Given this truism, under materialism, does it matter whether you are destroyed and a copy takes your place?
Nick
My ignorance of whether I am an original or copy doesn't determine whether I'm an original or copy. There is a matter of fact separate from the matter of the knowledge. And it's the matter of fact that determines whether the consciousness is a property of the original, or of a copy. My current lack of knowledge of whether "my" refers to an original or copy is just that: a lack of knowledge of the facts. From the point of view of skepticism (incomplete knowledge), I could be either. From the point of view of materialism (as 'matter' of fact), I am one, or the other.
You're introducing occupational concerns into a hypothetical. There is no reason, hypothetically, that two places can't be assumed to have identical temperatures.
I think in order to have a meaningful thought experiment, you have to try to keep it as realistic as possible and not introduce things that make no sense at all. The teleporter is hypothetical enough as it is, without introducing that conditions in Cairo and Honolulu are identical.
I admit I'm somewhat baffled by this objection.
Hypotheticals are always based on ideal conditions. In laboratory experiments, we control conditions as best we can, make them as ideal as possible, to isolate a property. The nice thing about thought-experiments is it's much easier to control conditions. Saying there are two different places with identical temperatures to deduce a consequence is just establishing a hypothetical, in order to isolate a property (the distinct, material instances of the thermometers, in this case). Isolation of a relevant property is the whole point of any hypothetical. Those ideal conditions make the hypothetical meaningful, not meaningless. The assumption that two things can be materially identical is the whole point of the teleporter hypothetical. The assumption that two places can have identical temperatures furthers the hypothetical by attempting to isolate the requested property ("what is lost when we destroy one of the copies?"). Any additional relevant assumption makes the hypothetical more meaningful again. That's a large chunk of how philosophy and science are done (not to mention mathematics, which is nothing but giant idealized hypotheticals).
So I think this objection is based on a misunderstanding of what hypotheticals are, and we can ignore it.
that we care at all about the someone, about their uniquely situated consciousness, is enough to invalidate the claim that nothing is lost via teleportation.
It is you who argued that the consciousness and the recording are equivalent. Since the recording is sent along with the rest, it is not lost. Only transferred.
The recording is an active process, not equivalent to its algorithm and the data it accumulates. Otherwise, nothing is lost if we preserve one and a destroy a million recording instruments in a million and one environments which have been registering identically up to the moment of the mass destruction. It seems to me something is lost: a million instruments in a million separate environments, the ability to monitor those million separate environments, on the flawed assumption that it's irrelevant where each instrument is.
The same for human as for instrumental "consciousness".
You (your material body and its consciousness) ceasing to exist for any length of time, under materialism, sounds an awful like like death.
Being reconstructed in all your detail sounds an awful lot like resurrection.
Then I am as unconvinced by the teleporter as the crucifixion.
My copy wouldn't know the difference. And I wouldn't be around to know the difference.
That's the point. There will be no one who notices the difference, because materially there is no difference. That's materialism for you.
That's not materialism, though (or only of the most eliminative, dismissive kind). As argued above, not noticing a difference is not the same as there being no difference. Wholesale ignorance doesn't determine matters of fact. And as a matter of fact, there is a difference, in the time(s) and/or place(s) of the separate, actively conscious material instance(s): which exist, and which have been destroyed.
I confess I've only skimmed this thread, so I apologize if I'm duplicating points already made.
First, isn't it impossible for us to do what the OP suggests? (I don't mean just technically, but logically impossible to know everything about every particle in our bodies. Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle.)
Second, if we suspend disbelief and say it's possible, for those who are arguing that it's not the same person, wouldn't you make the same argument that "I" am not the same person "I" was a moment ago, or yesterday or 10 years ago? (I'm exchanging gases with my environment constantly, and adding new material and discarding old material very nearly non-stop.)
Again, sorry for repeating points that I have to assume have already been mentioned.
Hey, Joe.

Not sure if you're repeating a point either, but since I haven't responded to this one anyway: the gradual replacement of bits of a person isn't equivalent to the destruction of a person. With gradual replacement, the active process of consciousness isn't being destroyed; with teleportation which destroys an original (and its attendant consciousness), it seems to be. So, if we make uninterrupted/intact/undestroyed consciousness our criterion for remaining the "same person", in your gradual replacement case, it makes sense to say you are the same person; in the case of teleportation (near-instantaneous destruction and replacement), it doesn't.
Forgive me for not replying to, or reading, every post on this matter; but talk about being pedantic and this thread takes the cake. ...
My ****** fault, I fear. Bad case of the cartesians this weekend.
