Fascinating if confirmed. I love my kids, as does my wife, but this chimera idea bothers me, as well as reassures me. So they are never truly gone?
- But, why would the odds that I would live again be any less than the odds that I would live the first time?
- But, why would the odds that I would live again be any less than the odds that I would live the first time?
Dave,Because there is no known mechanism in the scientific model for someone to live more than once. Once the brain starts to decompose or is destroyed, it's gone and cannot be rebuilt.
Edited to add: the odds of a duplicate of you existing in the future might be nonzero, but would be very low, because history does not repeat itself to that level of detail. You would have to rerun the entire history of the universe to get a duplicate of you.
- No.Are you reciting Buddhist koans?
Dave,
- Just to make sure -- such a duplicate of me, would not be the same me. It wouldn't be that I came back to life. Is that correct?
Giordano said:Again, each VW is a separate car, even if it is identical to thousands of others. If I crash it, I can get a replacement that seems to be identical. But the car I crashed is gone.
Dave,
- Just to make sure -- such a duplicate of me, would not be the same me. It wouldn't be that I came back to life. Is that correct?
Because there is no known mechanism in the scientific model for someone to live more than once. Once the brain starts to decompose or is destroyed, it's gone and cannot be rebuilt.
Edited to add: the odds of a duplicate of you existing in the future might be nonzero, but would be very low, because history does not repeat itself to that level of detail. You would have to rerun the entire history of the universe to get a duplicate of you.
- But, why would the odds that I would live again be any less than the odds that I would live the first time?
You wouldn't "live again" because it wouldn't be you; it would be a replica of you. Your scenario doesn't involve you living again.
Your question is like asking, "if I have two apples, does that mean that the odds are zero that one of them is an orange?"
Dave,
- Still trying to figure out exactly where our opinions first diverge.
1. I have a sense of self that science says will not survive the death of my brain, nor will it ever return.
2. There is no biology that exclusively produces me such that by duplicating that biology, I would live again.
- So far, so good?
Dave,
- Just to make sure -- such a duplicate of me, would not be the same me. It wouldn't be that I came back to life. Is that correct?
Technically, it never returns after any amount of time passes whether or not you die. The you that exists now is not the you that existed yesterday, despite the subjective feeling of continuity.1. I have a sense of self that science says will not survive the death of my brain, nor will it ever return.
Not biology alone, but physics could do it.2. There is no biology that exclusively produces me such that by duplicating that biology, I would live again.
Dave,
- Just to make sure -- such a duplicate of me, would not be the same me. It wouldn't be that I came back to life. Is that correct?
Does anyone want to bet that next Jabba will argue that because a physical duplication does not become "me" then "me" must be non-physical?
- But, why would the odds that I would live again be any less than the odds that I would live the first time?
Does anyone want to bet that next Jabba will argue that because a physical duplication does not become "me" then "me" must be non-physical?
It's this pesky evidence thing that you avoid at all cost to your intellectual detriment. Why do you keep doing that?
Because there is none that supports his position, and plenty that contradicts it.
Dave,
- Still trying to figure out exactly where our opinions first diverge.
1. I have a sense of self that science says will not survive the death of my brain, nor will it ever return.
2. There is no biology that exclusively produces me such that by duplicating that biology, I would live again.
- So far, so good?