I have to agree with Simon_Jester on this, we see those events from the perspective of Barclay last I checked NOT from an external POV so how can you say we are seeing the whole perspective nessessary to make that call.Simon_Jester wrote:...Yeah. Assuming that we're tracking what happens to Barclay, and not "what Barclay perceives," that's a clincher. The catch is that if there's a five second period during which there is no conscious Barclay, then we're not going to see that period through his eyes, any more than we see the events passing around our viewpoint character when he's unconscious.Havok wrote:This. Despite all the other arguments, this has not been explained in the context of those arguments, nor been countered. It seems like it has been largely ignored.Kamakazie Sith wrote:Transporters do not kill you. If anyone has a copy of TNG Realm of Fear you can watch Barkley transport over from a first person perspective. There is no break in consciousness.
Only Stark touched on it with his 'consciousness during the swirly parts' post. But that doesn't explain the episode away at all.
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And how would you even know said hypothetical "program" was even the same before the transport? How would you go about testing this "intangible"? A brain scan would not tell you enough to make that determination.Simon_Jester wrote:I'm not arguing for souls here. I'm not arguing for any self-awareness that takes any form outside the electrical activity within the brain. What I am arguing for is the existence of programs as abstractions, in the sense that the C program "Hello, World!" exists. I can point to instances of "Hello, World!" I can even write out its code. But a copy of "Hello, World!" is not the same beast as the program "Hello, World!" itself. The instance of the concept is not the concept itself, any more than a falling rock is the law of gravity.
If I erase a copy of "Hello, World!" and write another copy, I have not destroyed "Hello, World," nor have I created it. All I've done is move it. The person who wrote it for the first time can be said to have created it, and the person who destroys the last extant copy (including copies that are stored in computer or human memory) can be said to have destroyed it, but so long as a copy of it exists, "Hello, World!" exists.
At no point are two seperate individuals the same person. One just has to look at the clones and identical twins (that share absultly identical DNA) to see that they are seperate individuals with seperate identities. Practical purposes is a useless concept in this argument I mean my step-brother is in all practical purposes my brother but that doesnt make him my actual blood brother.If identity is to mean anything at all, there has to be a horizon of "sufficient similarity" within which identities converge to one for practical purposes. But that leads us right back to the problem of figuring out just how similar two people have to be before they count as the same person, rather than one original and one copy.
That would only work if your Kirk truely IS indistinguishable from the previous Kirk. I have already mentioned that the transporter produces one bit errors and that these errors can build up to things like transporer psycosis. It would be VERY likely this would be easy to test for in universe. So I do believe it is posible to test for these things and distinguish between the two.(or more)This is not, however, evidence that what comes out always IS NOT who or what went in. If I beam Kirk up from the planet, something may go wrong and leave me with zombie-Kirk or evil-Kirk or six identical Kirks or Kirk from an alternate universe. The process is not without its bizarre and improbable risks. But I may also end up with a normal Kirk. The normal Kirk I get cannot be distinguished from the normal Kirk I started with; I see no reason to accuse this Kirk of being a fake and denying him access to the bridge on the grounds that he is not the captain.
So this "program" thing of yours is BS huh nothing else intangable but a name?The only intangible thing being transferred is a name tag: "This is (a) Captain Kirk." That's not an essence or soul at all; that's just a description. It's like saying "this is a lump of granite" or "this is the script for A New Hope."
But that instance of an individual IS an individiual in and of itself. We agree that it is permanently dead but think that someone else coming along that looks and acts simmilar somehow miraculausly changes that instance of an individual after it has died to someone who is alive.But for some (bad) definitions of "death," or for a definition corresponding to "clinical death," a transporter brings about temporary "death." However, it does not bring about the permanent death of an individual, even though it brings about the permanent death of an instance of an individual.
So to you an individual who has been run through the transporter is really a string of individuals whom are given the label of a person because that is who they seem like. I can see how that view would become a legal and socitial view. (as shown in ST)I can point to the pile of ashes that was Captain Kirk and say "That Captain Kirk is dead" in the same sense that I say "That copy of the script has been destroyed." However, I am then obliged to point to the guy wearing a Starfleet captain's uniform who just beamed up to where I am and say "That Captain Kirk is alive," because he is in fact standing there going all William Shatner on me. That guy passes any "Is this or is this not Captain Kirk?" test I can devise, and therefore must be a genuine Captain Kirk.
And given the presence of a genuine Captain Kirk, I cannot say that "Captain Kirk is dead," because dead men don't smack me upside the head with a campy doubled-fist punch for calling them dead men. Nor do they reply that history considers them dead and ask who they are to argue, or any of the other things that (a) Captain Kirk might do in response to being told he's dead.
Granted, this Captain Kirk is not the original Captain Kirk, much as my copy of Hamlet is not Shakespeare's rough draft with all its beer stains and crossed out words. But my copy of Hamlet is still Hamlet, and this guy is still Captain Kirk.
Would it seem to be effectively Kirk yes, but is he truly the Kirk that steped on the pad...no.
I laguhed good and hard at the image of the campy doubled-fist punch. Thanks