Such things come about because of our consciousness. We may use physical features to identify people in various situations. But my identity is my consciousness. We don't care what Bach or Beethoven looked like, or their fingerprints. Their identities are not about their physical characteristics.No non-cognitive spontaneous physical process anywhere in the universe could have produced such a vastly improbable combination of materials, much less millions of nearly identical replicas in just a few short years of one another. These sorts of commonplace human examples typify the radical discontinuity separating the physics of the spontaneously probable from the deviant probabilities that organisms and minds introduce into the world. — Terrence Deacon
We may use physical features to identify people in various situations. But my identity is my consciousness. We don't care what Bach or Beethoven looked like, or their fingerprints. Their identities are not about their physical characteristics. — Patterner
The context i'm concerned with, and what I believe the OP is concerned with, is the internal state. We are not posting here about how tall we are, what our hair color is, the shape of our fingerprints, etc. Our discussions here or concerning our consciousness, desires, intentions, etc. Bach's compositions are not expressions of the former. They are expressions of the latter. youIt depends on context. Casual acquaintances might identify Bach by his appearance and mannerisms. The police, by his fingerprints. Us, viewing him as a historical figure, by his works and influence. But only Bach might identify himself by his own internal state. — hypericin
No. Kirk wasn't also split. Kirk was split. Riker was not. Two entirely different scenarios.
Kirk was, indeed, split in two. His yin and yang halves were separated.
Riker was duplicated. — Patterner
And we're not really killing anybody, because the duplicate is still at the other location, right? — Patterner
Right. And it's the same whether the transporter kills the original before the duplicate is created, or after.And we're not really killing anybody, because the duplicate is still at the other location, right?
— Patterner
This is the crux of the problem. From one perspective, the fact that there is a duplicate of you somewhere else in the world seems to have no bearing on your own self interests, and on whether you consent to being killed. In that moment, that duplicate, even if qualitatively identical to you, is numerically distinct. Therefore, that someone else gets to live your life is slim comfort in the face of the fact that you will be killed. — hypericin
Right. And it's the same whether the transporter kills the original before the duplicate is created, or after. — Patterner
@Christoffer wrote a story where it turned out that sleep was actually death. Consciousness doesn't survive, a new one is born every morning, with memory intact. This bothered me, I think because if seems like a distinction without a difference. So what if I "die" every night? What if every hour, or every second, I "die". What would be the observable consequence? There would be none at all. And so if there is no observable consequence from this distinction, shouldn't we discard the distinction? — hypericin
If you create an identical body with an identical
brain in exactly the same condition as the original, you would have 2 identical conscious people, both with identical memories and emotions about those memories.
Going forward , their experience would diverge creating different memories and experiences. — Fess
No issue for them either. — AmadeusD
As a hobby SF writer (in the past), I disagree. In fact, there are issues to figure out that more pressing than body-soul dualism. For example, here: Could the spouse be tried for bigamy? Multiple spouses suggests yes. Only one marriage certificate suggests no. — Dawnstorm
Wait, only one marriage certificate? Two individuals sharing the same certificate? After all, both of them have the same history, so that one certificate is valid for them both. — Dawnstorm
So what about... oh, I don't know... debt? You borrow a dollar on Monday, get duplicated on Tuesday, and now what? Do I get two dollars on Wednsday? After all, no matter who pays me, the other didn't pay me and still owes me a dollar. — Dawnstorm
If it's a freak accident, people will figure things out, but in the Star Trek case... it's a transporter malfunction. You know what that suggests to anyone even remotely familiar with the history of invention? That's right: human duplication technology. — Dawnstorm
So here's the question: solve those legal problems and see whether your approach tells you something about your instinctive attitude towards the problem at issue. Maybe? — Dawnstorm
If there's something meaningful that remains between teh two, fire it at me — AmadeusD
These relate to whether you're a legal positivist or not. Yes? — AmadeusD
As I said, they are not the same person on ANY conception except Immaterial Soul — AmadeusD
NB: probably worth realizing that in a world that this machine exists, the Law knows about it and has anticipated these problems. — AmadeusD
They share a history. — Dawnstorm
P(t1) --Duplication event--> P1(t2) and P2(t2). There is no P1(t1)/P2(t1). There's only P(t1). — Dawnstorm
I don't think any of our current intuitions can prepare us for this type of technology. — Dawnstorm
What any one person believes is besides the point. — Dawnstorm
They were the same person before the splitting event, which is when the certificate was issued. — Dawnstorm
c) The certificate is valid for one of them, and invalid for the other (no idea how to argue for this; my least favourite) — Dawnstorm
My immediate intuition went to "contract", but that wouldn't work, since the potentially disagreeing parties are at that time still one person. A type of "will"? I will let this to P1 and this to P2? — Dawnstorm
There was only P1 before the splitting even - regardless of Classic or Branchline version. — AmadeusD
Me: Two copies of the original (which is destroyed). — Dawnstorm
This is not the case in the TE. The branch line case results in the original and one duplicate; not two duplicates. Perhaps that’s the issue — AmadeusD
Ah, yeah, I was talking Star Trek transporter as per the OP. I missed the two-line post about Parfit. I've never heard of that case, and am unfamiliar of the specifics. I'm not sure I'd change my mind, but I might. What's "TE"? — Dawnstorm
At the very least the original and copy would know who is who. — Dawnstorm
Under the Star Trek teleporter model, there's nothing meaningful to distinguish the resulting individuals, since the original (who committed the killing) got taken apart, and both versions were assembled using the same information. — Dawnstorm
Not even the people themselves would have a clue. — Dawnstorm
but the simple existence of such a duplication technology might have effects that need to be dealt with one way or another. — Dawnstorm
For example, consider a religious fanatic who thinks he must kill unbelievers but since killing is a crime, he must also atone for it. He could use this technology to first kill someone, then duplicate himself, then turn himself in, expecting his duplicate to do the same (which he probably will if it is possible, since he is an identical copy of the original). — Dawnstorm
I think such technology might have rather radical effect on what ideas we can even think about. — Dawnstorm
TE=thought experiment. — AmadeusD
I think that's true, yes. There memories would differ in "cogito"-type ways that ensure knowledge of which they are. — AmadeusD
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