Yes, if you change the environment, you change what someone sees.I could be wrong but I believe existing evidence suggests that if you block the input from sensory neurons a person won't know they are standing in front of a mountain vista.
in the same sense that headaches are caused by a lack of aspirin.To me this implies that if you tricked sensory neurons into firing the way you want the individual would think they were wherever you wanted them to think they were.
You did not answer about the thrown ball.But at any rate this is irrelevant because I am talking about keeping every atom of every neuron in sync (if need be -- I don't think the granularity needs to be that fine, but who knows). So you are right that I am assuming such a thing is possible.
If you don't want to make that assumption then clearly the thought experiment is not for you.
We are embedded in our contexts. Remove an action from its context, and you have changed the action. Running for a bus is not the same as running for exercise is not the same as running from a mugger is not the same as running in an athletic competition. Even if the action is identical. Zap somebody while running from a mugger into a new situation and everything is different. You are assuming that the environmental impact is zero.
I agree; garbage in, garbage out. You really should examine your assumptions more closely.So what? If you start with the assumption 1 + 1 == 2, you end up with the conclusion 2 + 2 == 4.
If you start with the assumption that the Earth is flat, you end up with the conclusion that sailing to the edge is a bad idea.
Both are logically valid arguments.
Well, yeah, I addressed that in my first post.It seems like you are really attacking the assumption that self is information only. OK. But that wasn't the point of this thread. The point of this thread was to discuss what the implications are if that assumption is true.
If what is important is that the work survives in some form, then yes, it is only important that the work survives in some form. Can't argue with that. Would be boring.Sure. If what is important is that the work survives in some form, then clearly a 0.5 probability of being the last surviving work (should one of them randomly disappear) makes it much more important than a copy with a 0.001 probability of being the last surviving work but not as important as a copy with a probability of 1.0.
Then why are you assigning value to even the last person? It's arbitrary, after all, and we have plenty more people.Your argument here is severly flawed because you are ignoring the fact that humans assign dynamic value to things all the time. None of the coins minted in 1500 were that special in 1500. Now the remaining ones are simply because they are the remaining ones. So are you saying all those coins were just as special as the current survivors when they were minted? If so, why didn't anyone treat them that way?
And in the last thread I gave my conditions for entering it.I don't care about any "many worlds" interpretations because in those interpretations neither I nor anyone I care about knows anything of the other copies. In the teletransporter example I am explicitly informed of what happens.
Didn't say it was; didn't say we can't. Never said value was absolute. I have no problems being sentimental (ask anyone). And in one sense, given our surplus of people and the arbitrary nature of "rights", our attitude toward killing anyone, ever, is pure sentiment.Absolutely. But why is sentimentality so bad, Mercutio? If we are sentimental because those originals were touched by the great Shakespeare himself, so what? You are sounding like a theist who is deluded into thinking that value must be absolute. Why can't we assign sentimental value to objects?
Again, I gave my conditions for stepping into the machine. Sounds not that far from yours. But my conditions recognize that, yes, the scenario results in killing a person. If by "resolving", you are arguing that you are not killing a person since another copy exists, then your resolution does not answer any interesting questions, and is just one more exercise in circularity.What you have to realize is that not everyone is as sentimental towards their physical bodies as you are towards the original works of Shakespeare. I, for one, don't give a hoot about this rotting piece of meat my mind resides in. I don't like that I am bald, I don't like my complexion, I don't like my genetic diseases, I don't like a whole heck of a lot. And I certainly don't attach any extra value to it simply on the basis that it has been through 30 years of my life. What I do like is my mind. So if I could keep the mind and swap out the cruddy body for a new one -- ideally, one that I could pick and choose at whim -- I would be very inclined to do so.