rocketdodger
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2005
- Messages
- 6,946
Suppose the teletransporter (TTP) is altered so that the teleportation takes place slowly, over time, as such:
1) There is an identical body at the destination, that is in stasis "slave" mode. For every neuron at the source, Ns
, there is an identical neuron at the destination, Nd
.
2) At all times during the process, a neuron is either a master or a slave.
3) Only one of each pair can be a master neuron. That is, if Ns
is a master, Nd
is a slave.
3) Master neurons "run" normally, whereas slave neurons are, by some advanced technology, simply copying the behavior of the corresponding master at the other end. Slave neurons will, however, interact with other neurons normally, for instance by activating master neurons, etc.
4) One by one the masters at the source have their status swapped to slave with their counterparts at the destination. In other words, for n = 1 to n = <number of neurons in body>, we make Ns
a slave and Nd
a master.
5) At the end of the process the body at the source is now in full slave mode and the body at the destination is the master that is actually determining behavior.
I think most people would agree that this feels comfortable -- they would be willing to step into the teleporter and they would actually experience the transport. As their sensory neurons were "moved" to the destination, they would see and feel parts of both location, until eventually the source was completely replaced with the destination.
Here is the problem this scenario raises -- what duration of transfer is OK?
It seems to me that there is no change in any physical behavior at either end if the duration is shortened -- including down to zero, or instantaneous (which is physically impossible, but assume we could do it for the sake of argument). As long as none of the slave neurons get out of sync with their masters -- ever -- the duration of the process is irrelevant.
Which means if someone holds that consciousness is the result of physical processes, rather than some supernatural soul etc, they should be willing to step in the machine if it simply copies them to the destination and destroys the original an instant later.
Thoughts?
1) There is an identical body at the destination, that is in stasis "slave" mode. For every neuron at the source, Ns
2) At all times during the process, a neuron is either a master or a slave.
3) Only one of each pair can be a master neuron. That is, if Ns
3) Master neurons "run" normally, whereas slave neurons are, by some advanced technology, simply copying the behavior of the corresponding master at the other end. Slave neurons will, however, interact with other neurons normally, for instance by activating master neurons, etc.
4) One by one the masters at the source have their status swapped to slave with their counterparts at the destination. In other words, for n = 1 to n = <number of neurons in body>, we make Ns
5) At the end of the process the body at the source is now in full slave mode and the body at the destination is the master that is actually determining behavior.
I think most people would agree that this feels comfortable -- they would be willing to step into the teleporter and they would actually experience the transport. As their sensory neurons were "moved" to the destination, they would see and feel parts of both location, until eventually the source was completely replaced with the destination.
Here is the problem this scenario raises -- what duration of transfer is OK?
It seems to me that there is no change in any physical behavior at either end if the duration is shortened -- including down to zero, or instantaneous (which is physically impossible, but assume we could do it for the sake of argument). As long as none of the slave neurons get out of sync with their masters -- ever -- the duration of the process is irrelevant.
Which means if someone holds that consciousness is the result of physical processes, rather than some supernatural soul etc, they should be willing to step in the machine if it simply copies them to the destination and destroys the original an instant later.
Thoughts?