Z
Variable Constant
I already answered. The personality that I know myself to be would see X (if we ask the original) and the personality I know myself to be would see O (if we ask the copy).
So you would see an X.
I already answered. The personality that I know myself to be would see X (if we ask the original) and the personality I know myself to be would see O (if we ask the copy).
Not understood. What physical properties does a duplicate not have that the original does? What are these mysterious "continous and dynamical" properties?No, there is a unique instance of you that is a part of the continuous and dynamic physical you. Creating a second 'you' does not satisfy the continuous, dynamic aspect of what you are; it only creates a copy of you.
Yes, there is nothing physical to distinguish the two. What is "differential experience"? Some new physical property?There may be nothing at all to distinguish between the two, except for differential experience. At the point any experience differs between the two, the distinguishment is made. But here's the catch: since your personal record of a continual and dynamic existence would be faced with cessation, how on earth can you say that you would 'transport' anywhere?
I don't resort to any strange scenarios as far as I know. And i don't know why you keep refering to identical twins. They are of no relevance to this thread.I've noticed that those who propose what you are claiming above often have to resort to scenarios where the difference is deliberately disguised; where the original has to be killed before realizing that a difference exists, or where conditions have to be so nearly identical as to not create a sense of difference. Why? Because any signifigant difference would illustrate that the original consciousness remains trapped within its own body, unable to transport ANYWHERE, and suffers a fatal fate - no getting around that one, I'm afraid. UNLESS folks like DD above are proposing that identical twins share a consciousness, or that you can have a continuous and dynamic record of existence shared between two physically separated but otherwise identical beings... and of course, if that's not being proposed, we see clearly that duplication does NOT equal transportation of conscious awareness.
No, there is no reason to suspect that the particular elementary particles which happen to get incorporated into your brain have special properties in addition to those properties which are known. When you are born you have a certain number of atoms in your brain. This number increases as you grow until IIRC age 7 or so.Another argument, that so far I have not offered because I have certain problems with it, is that we're never the same person, from moment to moment - due to cellular replacement, for example; yet the neurons of the brain remain largely the same throughout human life, and since there's no reason to think that consciousness ISN'T tied to the brain, there is therefore reason to think that a particular consciousness may very well be tied to a particular collection of neurons.. and that duplicating that set of neurons would only create a second, identical consciousness - not the SAME consciousness.
The copy is not a duplicate as the word is used in this thread. A duplicate is accurate down to individual quantum states.I look at it this way: if I have a drawing of a cat, and I take that drawing and create two copies in the copy machine, is each copy the other copy? Is copy A identical to copy B? Of course. But is copy A copy B? Of course not. If I burn copy B, does anything happen to A? Not necessarily.
See above.Now suppose that copy A was actually a copy of B... now does A burn? Not necessarily.
Now imagine if copy B had self-awareness... what then?
Yes, no tranfer is necessary. YOU only exist if a machinery generating you exists. If two such exist, two YOUs exist.I'm not arguing for an imaginary soul; I'm arguing against a magical transfer of consciousness from one set of atoms to a completely unrelated and disconnected set of atoms. It's obvious that what's being proposed is a magical transfer; or, more appropriately, that no transfer at all is actually occuring, and that DD and others seem to prefer the idea of somebody carrying on as them, rather than continuing themselves. Why? Beats the hell out of me.
At the moment of duplication, both will be me. You don't seem to understand this concept. Let me make an example:DD - If the duplicate is made, and the original is NOT killed - which one is you? Yes, I know that you're both identical in most respects - but which one has been you and will continue to be you? Will you suddenly have awareness of being on Mars, or will you merely be aware that a duplicate of you is on Mars? Answer very carefully, because within that answer lies my whole problem with this nonsense.
One of me would, yes.So you would see an X.
One of me would, yes.
Not understood. What physical properties does a duplicate not have that the original does? What are these mysterious "continous and dynamical" properties?
Yes, there is nothing physical to distinguish the two. What is "differential experience"? Some new physical property?
I don't resort to any strange scenarios as far as I know. And i don't know why you keep refering to identical twins. They are of no relevance to this thread.
The copy is not a duplicate as the word is used in this thread. A duplicate is accurate down to individual quantum states.
Yes, no tranfer is necessary. YOU only exist if a machinery generating you exists. If two such exist, two YOUs exist.
At the moment of duplication, both will be me. You don't seem to understand this concept. Let me make an example:
Suppose a time machine was invented and you were transported back in time by one day. Into your own bedroom. Where your "old" you is brushing your teeth.
Which YOU is the real you? The one observing or the one brushing teeth?
Physically, duplicate and original might be absolutely identical, with the minor exception of spatial location. But the duplicate does not have a continuous connection to the original - only the illusion of a continuous connection. This continuity, physically, is in the form of the continual, gradual replacement of particles within the body/brain. Please recall, some of those particles are never replaced! So we have, first, a continual connection requirement - that the duplicate does not share.
Likewise, generating a duplicate - creating a twin - doesn't create a second instance of the same self.
You are defining "self" to require physical continuity. That's acceptable, but it means teleportation is impossible.
My definition of 'self' is a matter of simplicity - the continuous and dynamic record from the first person singular point of view.
Not for the original...![]()
Not for the original...![]()
Yes, for the original as well.
If the original cannot demonstrate physical continuity, because he was unconscious during the process or because the process was such as to obscure physical continuity, then the original and the duplicate will have equally valid claim to being the original (so far as anyone can determine).
Zaayrdragon, it seems like the opposing viewpoint is that they are both you.
Let's say that an exact copy and configuration of all atoms were made elsewhere, wouldn't both at least feel that they are the "real" you? In other words, if the two were unaware of each other, one would feel that the teleport was successful (that they teleported) and the other would feel that it didn't work (they are still where they were). Would the "real" you be the original?
Now, let's say that the teleportation is being offered as a service run by an unscrupulous company. They tell people that they are actually being moved from point A to point B, but in fact they are being copied as previously described. The "original" is then subsequently bludgeoned to death. Would anybody ever know? Certainly the other "you" wouldn't know and would identify and feel entirely as you.
But wouldn't that actually be exactly the same as the Star Trek scenario where your atoms are disassembled (killing the original), beamed one by one to another location, and then reassembled on the other end (making a copy of the original)?
No, because that process assumes the state of the copy is exactly the same as the state of the original when it was destroyed, so no information is being lost.