But nobody is arguing against that. Suppose yesterday i used my long range mind scanner to put you in a perfect cloned body that i made from some of your dna i found all without your knowledge.Gigaliel wrote:If I understand Starglider's fancy graphs, the appropriate question here is 'why'? Where are 'you' coming from, if not the processes in your brain?Shroom Man 777 wrote:I am still trapped in my original body. And my body and thoughts are separate from the body and thoughts of that clone copy, who is similarly restrained.Starglider wrote:Argument from personal incredulity, look it up.
Take your example. What if the scientist lied and painted the X on ShroomA instead of ShroomB. Switched the tanks and everything so you'd never know and there would never be any proof. This would be somewhat easier to do in a computer, obviously.
ShroomA would then go on to act as ShroomB would have and vice versa. Have their minds traded places, then, or is it a farce? What if, with the powers of mad science, we did switch their minds? Did 'you' just switch places? Both minds are identical, so is the identity now determined who has the original body? By changing the brain's wiring, did two people just die and get replaced with identical ones? What if we just switch brains? Do we need some budget to keep track of 'you'?
What if you copy the Copy and then overwrite the Original. Since we're pretending the error margins are insignificant, there is no difference. Nothing changes. Did you die despite your mind being replaced by itself?
You could pull any of these tricks thousands of times and, by the what you say, have killed thousands of people. Awaken the bodies and there is no difference.
This bring us to what I really hope is Starglider's point or I will look like a doofus-is there any real difference? Do 'you' only inhabit one mind and the other is a copy? The answer would seem to be no; 'you' are both minds at the same time. If we take a math example, it's a bit like saying Shroomy(x) = Shroomy(x) despite whatever physical location the function is operating in, assuming identical input.
So, if you decide to fake kill one and then wipe his mind to the template and then show him the recording, it'd be the same as if he -actually- died and a 'copy' saw it, as we have (hopefully) established identical mind is identical self, which is what I'm getting.
Now i send someone out to give you serious brain damage with a baseball bat.
Is it ok that your current body has been reduced to this state?
Theres an identical version of you out there who can take over living your life while you are unable to move any more. However you know that you cannot move and you have no knowledge of the clone. Does this sound like good insurance against death? Great immortality? Now you succumb to your injuries and die. Does any different process happen now to if the clone had not existed? You wont close your eyes in your original body and open them in the cloned one will you?
From the perspective of society this process is great, because you can replace people without any problems in the case of accidental death/murder/assasination.
From the perspective of the deceased individual, it is useless.