Master of Ossus wrote:That would be true under your scenario, but I assume that I can't be required to assume a new and entirely counter position simply because it is posited that I now think so differently as to disagree with myself and my current understanding.
Fair enough, but conversely:
The entity which I refer to as "the new you" (henceforth MoO II) tells me that they are the same entity I refer to as "the old you" (henceforth MoO I). But MoO II would say that whether it was true or not, because MoO II remembers being MoO I, even if MoO II is not entirely comfortable with those memories. That doesn't mean MoO II
is MoO I. After all, I could plant fake memories of being MoO I in a completely different person, who bears no relationship to you whatsoever... that wouldn't make them into another MoO I, would it?
Am I obliged to take MoO II's word for it that MoO II is in fact MoO I, even when there are divergences in behavior, attitudes, and mindset so great that I could never imagine them being similar if they both existed side by side?
Again, "my experiences" is the answer to every one of your questions. I cannot be given another person's experiences, they define me as distinct from other people who lack those experiences, they belong uniquely to me and through no conceivable process can they be assigned to someone else.
But that implies that my above statement is wrong, that I
cannot give you false memories. Or would that change who you are? Or does it not matter, because your memories aren't really your experiences?
The most favorable answer to your case would seem to be that memory and experience aren't the same thing. But if they aren't, how do we
tell what experiences someone has had? If you somehow alter me into as close a duplicate of you as theoretically possible (rewriting mind and restructuring body accordingly), and I now
remember being you... am I or am I not another you?
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Then essentially what this thread comes down to is a disagreement between you and the rest of us over what constitutes the nature of human existence. We are arguing genetics and brain structure determine the individual and that I would still be me with a completely different set of life experiences--something that human imagination tends to follow. It is always easier for someone to imagine themselves in a different time or place or station in life than to imagine their very nature as being different. But in the end it seems that the argument has simply returned to the ages old nature vs. nurture.
Speaking for myself, I seem to be arguing a hybrid position: I think that identity and existence are a function of mind, which is actually quite a bit like MoO's position.
I think I draw different conclusions from MoO because I think that the patterns of mind that you can use to identify yourself need to have enough unique structural features to make you somehow
different from other people we would not normally say are identical to you. And then it follows that if I remove my unique mental features, I'm not really me, because there's no reason to
say that I'm me, as opposed to being someone else with a different mental landscape.
MoO does not seem to believe that.
By the way, I agree that brain structure has a huge effect on the mind, but that effect is sort of incidental to me. I think that ways of changing the mind that do NOT require changing the physical structure it runs on would be just as identity-disrupting as those that do, if the same amount of net mind-change occurs.