I sincerely wish that you would address what I am about to say, which I have said repeatedly before, as have others.6495-6468
Humots,
- I gotta say that this is really interesting (for me at least) -- we (you guys and I) cannot agree upon almost anything...
- Whatever -- my response is that there is a big difference between humans and cakes, and that this big difference excludes any "analogousness" (analogosity?) between them (re the issue here) -- each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
- Obviously, if we took an original being and replicated its specifications, we could tell (later) which being was the original, by its time of birth. If somehow the original and the copy were triggered at the same time, we would not be able to identify the original -- but then, who cares who the original was anyway? And, I’m not being flippant here -- who the original was has no bearing upon our issue here.
- Humots, I should probably spend more time on this, but I did want to let you know – today -- that I am trying to respond.
The "sense of self" only SEEMS to be separate from the consciousness
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I wonder why that is?Humots,
- I gotta say that this is really interesting (for me at least) -- we (you guys and I) cannot agree upon almost anything...
Indeed, but given that we can't recreate specific humans, we don't have real-world analogies to explain where we believe your thinking to be wrong. Any analogy is going to have flaws, but we can only discuss this in either hypothetical or analogous terms, and even the rich English language sometimes cannot express the concepts precisely enough. See for example the difficulty in using 'same' to mean 'identical' and vice versa.- Whatever -- my response is that there is a big difference between humans and cakes, and that this big difference excludes any "analogousness" (analogosity?) between them (re the issue here) --
If the copies were identical in every respect, including memories, observations and past happenings, then at the moment of replication each copy would have a separate but identical consciousness, including a separate but identical sense of self.each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
Ah, I think I see where some of the confusion has arisen. I believe that when we have talked of reproducing a person exactly including memories etc, we are referring to creating a clone of the exact same age and appearance. Despite the original being a singleton birth, we have posited creating an effectively identical twin at some later date. Both the original and the copy would believe themselves to have had the same date of birth.Obviously, if we took an original being and replicated its specifications, we could tell (later) which being was the original, by its time of birth.
I suspect the two people in question would care which one was the original and which one was the artificially created clone. I can see all sorts of problems where it would be important to determine which is the original, should such a situation arise.If somehow the original and the copy were triggered at the same time, we would not be able to identify the original -- but then, who cares who the original was anyway? And, I’m not being flippant here -- who the original was has no bearing upon our issue here.
I agree, and had thought of this while composing my post, but I went with granting Jabba the most possible leeway instead. Perhaps that was a mistake....to Jabba. It certainly doesn't seem that way to me. I've been going along with the "sense of self" terminology for the sake of discussion.
Why does that matter? The reason it "takes on" its own sense of self is because it emerges from that particular brain. Any sense of self that emerges from a copy's brain will consider that copy to be its self, because that's where it's located.
There's nothing about selves that suggests they can ignore time and location. A self can only see out of the eyes of the body it belongs to.
(Sorry for jumping in, Humots. I'm on my lunch break and had time to reply)
- Whatever -- my response is that there is a big difference between humans and cakes, and that this big difference excludes any "analogousness" (analogosity?) between them (re the issue here) -- each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
"Time of birth?" We're talking about perfect copies here! Not clones. The copy isn't born; it's made. If it were born, it would be a different age, which wouldn't be a perfect copy. It also wouldn't have a perfect copy of the original's brain, which is the important part of this exercise.- Obviously, if we took an original being and replicated its specifications, we could tell (later) which being was the original, by its time of birth.
It doesn't matter when they were "triggered". What matters is that the copy is identical, down to every particle in the brain. If they're identical, you can't identify the original, unless you watched as the copying took place.If somehow the original and the copy were triggered at the same time, we would not be able to identify the original
I am so glad you said this, because I was going to try to make this point, and I really thought it might be difficult.-- but then, who cares who the original was anyway? And, I’m not being flippant here -- who the original was has no bearing upon our issue here.
6495-6468
Humots,
- I gotta say that this is really interesting (for me at least) -- we (you guys and I) cannot agree upon almost anything...
- Whatever -- my response is that there is a big difference between humans and cakes, and that this big difference excludes any "analogousness" (analogosity?) between them (re the issue here) -- each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
6495-6468
- Obviously, if we took an original being and replicated its specifications, we could tell (later) which being was the original, by its time of birth.
6495-6468
If somehow the original and the copy were triggered at the same time, we would not be able to identify the original -- but then, who cares who the original was anyway? And, I’m not being flippant here -- who the original was has no bearing upon our issue here.
- Then, when I say that you seem to be saying that there are no specifications for you, you say that there are, and provide the above. But, are these the specifications for "you," or are they specifications for copies of you?
Dave,
- Before, you said that specifications of "me" would yield copies of me, rather than me. Do your "expanded" specifications yield you?
- I guess you're saying that your expanded specifications would yield you once, but after that they would only yield copies of you?
Agatha,
- I don't understand the inclusion of that last sentence -- my hypothetical does not include any changes to the DNA. Dave says that an exact recreation of my DNA, and even the first three years of my life, would produce a copy of me, but not me.
The other answers to you post cover it very well- read them!6495-6468
we (you guys and I) cannot agree upon almost anything...
- Whatever -- my response is that there is a big difference between humans and cakes, and that this big difference excludes any "analogousness" (analogosity?) between them (re the issue here) -- each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
- Obviously, if we took an original being and replicated its specifications, we could tell (later) which being was the original, by its time of birth. If somehow the original and the copy were triggered at the same time, we would not be able to identify the original -- but then, who cares who the original was anyway?
...each human possesses the emergent property of consciousness that automatically takes on its own sense of self which would be different between the different copies from the very beginning...
No, Jabba.
You haven't quite grasped what the phrase emergent property means yet.
- I gotta say that this is really interesting (for me at least) -- we (you guys and I) cannot agree upon almost anything...
repeated...
Once he's got us all used to the numbers, he'll introduce his new calendar, China will invade the Spratley Islands and force the cancellation of the 2012 Olympic Games, and Jabba, having stocked up on duct tape and draught excluders, will get ten wives and immortality.
ETA: sorry, wrong thread.
Dave,
- To me, you seem to be saying that your specs do not "specify" you, they simply allow for you. Can I go with that?
Surely my sarcasm was not that understated.