But first, it isn't an issue of "possible" -- I don't think that any of this is possible.
It is, and has always been, a hypothetical. If memory serves, it was
your hypothetical: What would happen to the "self" if we could hypothetically make a perfect copy of the body? You intended this to be problematic for materialism, since it would be a problem for your theory. But it isn't a problem for materialism because materialism doesn't involve incarnation; the self arises from the organism. Duplicate the organism and the duplicate will be self-aware just as the original is or was. Be all that as it may, of
course it's impossible. It's a thought experiment. The problem today is that you're trying to manipulate the thought experiment to once again inject the concept of a soul into E, the data, by inventing -- once again -- a new expression that refers to the supposedly ineffable part of E you keep begging.
I think that the issue has to do with the way I described the "self" a long time ago. I said that maybe the physical brain was just the receiver of the consciousness -- that it didn't actually produce the consciousness.
Yes, that was an analogy you used before, but it's not the analogy you're using now.
Here, let me help you: Under materialism, self-awareness is an emergent property of the process of neurological cognition that occurs in a functioning human brain. You are working on the part of your proof that estimates P(E|H). Your concept of a soul is not part of E, no matter what weasel-words you invoke to try to get it in there. E simply means we are self-aware, without trying to explain how or why. We have a sense of self. In this part of your proof, you may not invoke concepts here that are not part of H, because this part of your proof assumes
arguendo that H has happened or is true. None of the ideas you're trying to express via computer-and-camera or radio-and-signal analogies has the slightest to do with H. They are
all straw men. Quibbling over whether the straw man is wearing a fedora or a porkpie hat is not productive. Please stop this and move on.
Here, I'm saying that the same consciousness (inherently involving a particular self)...
No such individualization exists under H. You are self-aware. I am self-aware. Those are not two "particular self-awarenesses." Please disabuse yourself of this chronically broken idea. It has no meaning in materialism, or really any meaning in the known universe. There aren't two "going 60 mph" because the very concept is meaningless.
This is confusing stuff (at least for me)
It really isn't confusing for anyone else. Just because you're confused doesn't mean anyone else has to be. If you find this topic to be too intellectually challenging to understand how you're wrong, then please just admit -- after five years of ongoing failure -- that you aren't competent to debate at this level, concede the debate, and give your critics their due. They have been patient with your Befuddled Old Man character for far longer than you are entitled to.
And by now we all know it's just an act. You're not "confused." You're simply failing in your attempt to foist a straw man onto your critics, and you're trying to place blame for that elsewhere. Your critics, both here and elsewhere, are simply not as dumb as you seem to think they are. They can easily see right through your fairly ham-fisted efforts to hustle important premises to your proof in through the back door by constantly shifting language and disguising your real intent. You avoid the word "soul" only because it
too blatantly begs the question; you apparently need more subtle question-begging that might actually stand a chance of fooling someone, hence the "confusing" romp through the thesaurus.
Under materialism, self-awareness is very simple: it is an emergent property of a functioning brain and nervous system. As with any property, it comes and goes exactly as the entity of which it's a property comes and goes; it's meaningless to consider that it would have a separate existence. As with any other property, it isn't particularized, individualized, enumerable, or discrete. It's a property. All your "confusion" arises when you try to depart from that simplicity and tack on a bunch of nonsense you're making up as you go.
...but so far, I suspect that both versions are correct, but simply represent different perspectives. For now, I'll stick with the latter analogy.
Neither version represents H, materialism. They are
deeply wrong, if your intent is to accurately represent the thinking that opposes your belief. You seem entirely disinterested in whether or not you're right about this, and it's a very key element to your proof. What is the rational way, under your "Effective Debate," to respond to a claimant who has no interest in fact or truth?