[ExI] teachers
efc at swisscows.email
efc at swisscows.email
Thu Aug 31 22:15:57 UTC 2023
Good evening Jason,
On Mon, 28 Aug 2023, Jason Resch via extropy-chat wrote:
> Sorry for being unclear. I meant that identity includes both. Not just
> hw and not just sw, buth both, combined. I'm not saying it solves all
> problems, but it seems to me as if it does solve at least some
> challenges.
>
> Ahh I see what you mean now. One could define personal identity in terms of the continuity of the same body and mind, but then the
> question is how strict must the similarity be for the identity to hold?
Yes, it is a very common sense model, but just like ethics, it is
probably easy to come up with corner cases and thought experiments which
poke holes at it at the extremes.
> If completely strict, you end up with the empty individualism of #1, if unrestricted you end up with the open individualism of #3,
> since if one permits gradual changes, it is still subject to gradually morphing into any other person, and even with the restriction
> of bodily continuity, our metabolism is constantly churning out old material and replacing it with new material, (something like half
> the atoms in your brain are replaced every 8 days through metabolism). What if these atoms were collected and used to construct a new
> version of you, Ship of Theseus style? Which one are you? How do we track bodily continuity when we are each, effectively rivers
> through which atoms flow?
In terms of identity, that's why I would think of two anchors, bodily
continuity and mind continuity. There is also the dimension of location,
to cover the case of id when copied. That would change location from 1x
to 2x, thus somehow "violating" the id, making it a separate one. But
I'll stop for now, because I think you'll get to that below.
>
> Well, over the course of a life time, and assuming no external
> interference, I'd say that there is a continuity of both body and mind,
> as per the laws governing the workings of body and mind.
>
> When it comes to the question of if this is a 10% person or a 100%
> person, that would depend on the context and purpose of the conversation
> it is used in.
>
> > And is there a continuous spectrum between any two persons?
>
> If you're talking about one organism separated by time, according to the
> above, I'd say yes. Separate persons, no. But I think I misunderstand you here.
>
>
> I mean from the perspective of within an infinite reality, as described here:
>
> "You see, The Object contains the Continuum of Souls. It is a connected set, with a frothy, fractal structure, of rather high
> dimensionality. The Continuum contains an infinite number of Souls, all Souls in fact, and an infinite number of them are You. Or at
I'm sorry, but I think you need to unpack that for me. I have a feeling
that is a quote from a book, so for me, a "continuum of souls" and "connected
set, with a frothy, fractal structure, of rather high dimensionality"
means nothing to me.
> least, close enough to being You so that nobody could tell the difference. Not even You.
> And the Continuum also contains an infinite number of souls that are almost You. And an infinite number that are sort of You. And
> because it is a Continuum, and because there is really no objective way to tell which one is really You, then any method one uses to
> try to distinguish between You and non-You will produce nothing but illusion. In a sense, there is only one You, and it is Everyone.
> Of course, You can tell which one is you, can’t you? Or can you?"
> -- Douglas Jones in "A Conversation" (1996)
I'm sorry, it could be the time of night, or it could be my two beers at
the birthday dinner I just came back from, but I do not understand what
Douglas is talking about here.
> Ah, but this was my badly made point above, that only bodily-continuity
> is not enough. In a cell there is no mind, so the question then is not
> relevant.
>
> > if we ask: "what experiences will this body eventually have?" I think this perspective would have to say the
> experiences of both
> > twins belong to the future continuations of this cell.
>
> Same here. Cell is not enough. The continuity I'd say has to cover both
> the body and the mind.
>
> Do concussions (or any discontinuous break in consciousness) end a person? What about a coma, when someone is unconscious for many
> months and then awakens with a (materially) completely new body? If continuity of body AND mind are strictly required and must be
> continuous, then I see interruptions in either as posing problems.
In the case of a concussion, the body is the same (roughly), and in case
of the mind, there is continuity in that memory, experiences, my daily
flow of events from before and after the interruption are the same.
Coma, the same thing. So I think you make a good point, and when I say
continuity I do not mean being awake or conscious. I believe I am the
same person before and after I wake up from sleeping, and I believe I am
the same before and after fainting. The continuity is one of experience,
identity and memory and body. Neither is interrupted by concussions or
coma.
However!
To illustrate the other side of the equation, let's say you are "mind
wiped". We have bodily continuity, but not one of the mind, and in that
case I would say that it is not the same person before and after.
> > This is strange, and something we rarely consider, but it all comes down to: why am I experiencing this perspective,
> rather than some
> > other? What pre-conditions were necessary for me to have been born, be alive, and experience life?
> >
> > Did it depend on certain atoms?--(what if my mom ate a different lunch when she was pregnant?) Does it depend on
> certain
> > genes?--(what if my eyes had been a different color?)
>
> I think here maybe we start to diverge into questions of existence,
> possibly reasons for living, and possibly teleological ideas.
>
> I don't mean to ask for what purpose or reason we are here, I mean rather: what is the reason you are you, and I am me? What was
> necessary (physically) for you to be the person you are peering through your eyes? What physical changes might have interrupted or
> prevented that from happening? What accounts for or explains the fact that you are Daniel (rather than someone else, or no one)?
The reason? My parents and my upbriging. But this is not your point.
Could you take your reasoning to the next step, because I feel there is a good
point coming here.
> But the fact is that you (and I) were. The probability of it is an after
> construction and also why I am not a fan of philosophical arguments
> suchas Pascals wager. I think statistics, especially applied in this
> way, and across ethereal realms leaving our material world, tend to lead
> us astray.
>
> Not everyone buys the appropriateness of using probability arguments in this way; but I consider it effectively the same thing as
Are you serious? I thought I was basically the only one. Do you have a
link to someone who does not like using probability arguments in this
way? The reason I am asking is that, as you can see, I am not able to
clearly state why I feel the way I do, and perhaps by reading someone
who actually spent a philosophical career thinking about it, my own
position could become a bit more clear.
> using fine-tuning of the universe: it seems something improbable has happened: is there an explanation? For the fine-tuning, the
> answer that demystifies the improbability is the anthropic principle. For why you were born, when it seems so unlikely, the answer
> that demystifies the improbability is open individualism.
To me, this sounds like the illusion of probability. I can take a smoked
almond from a bowl on my table and drop it on the floor and the
probability of it ending up there, starting from the big bang is
infinitely low. The probability of it ending up on the floor after I
drop it is infinitely high. So depending on my human frame of reference,
my starting point, I can toy with probabilities and make everything seem
like magic. I think, this is also why I do not like statistical
arguments about things which are not even part of our universe.
> I think we covered this in the original scenario. I'd argue that a copy,
> then restored, is not the same person due to the mind factor not being
> continuous. I do see a possibility for the same person in a ship of
> theseus procedure, since body and mind continuity would not be violated,
> but only transformed.
>
> What do you make the ship of Theseus where the old/original planks are secretly gathered and used to reconstruct the ship in its
> original form? What would you make of applying the same to a person's body, whose old atoms are collected and reformed into an
> identical copy?
If you mean a ship of theseus transformation from original to copy to
original, I think that would fit in with my model, since its not a copy,
and since continuity would be preserved. Or maybe I a fooling myself? ;)
> Yes and no. Depending on how the upload was done, from where to where,
> and how the continuity of the mind was handled. If a ship of theseus
> operation was performed, and then copied onto a different set of
> hardware, that would be one continuous and one copy. If you have linked
> clones, I could see preservation, but also waste if the two clones
> always had to give the same answer. Although from a disaster recovery
> point of view, that would be a fascinating concept!
>
> Yes, this is actually a theme of the TV show Foundation. Backup clones are kept, and new memories are constantly synchronized to
> their brains.
Ah, did that one start again? I saw season one, and apart from there
being a bit too much violence, it did have some interesting ideas. But
nothing beats the original books in my opinion. =)
> > the first time, and in a dying brain when the last two surviving neurons fire for the last time. Then from the mental
> continuity
> > perspective all mine states of all organisms are part of a connected set.
>
> I don't see how. It's separate organs, with separate reactions. I can
> however see and fully acknowledge that from a process point of view, or
> "tree of life" point of view, we are all related. But that's purely
> biologically and not related to my mind and sense of identity.
>
> Here I was operating from the assumption of mind continuity. This is what I would say is the view (common among
> physicalists/materialists/functionalists) where if you stepped into a teleporter, you would survive on the other end when you were
> reconstructed, even if new atoms were used. If we can survive teleporters, then it's the mind-state that must be preserved for
> survival, not any particular collection of atoms. In this case, if the last mind state of a dying brain happens to be the same mind
> state of another brain which continues on, this is in effect, identical to the transporter scenario. The mind survives because its
> mind-state is instantiated elsewhere where it continues on, despite that different material is used.
Ahhh, got it. I do see a break in continuity there, so for me, that
would be a new, identical clone.
> This does not work if you require bodily continuity as well, as every night when we sleep, atoms are discontinuously replaced between
> successive moments of consciousness (between when we fall asleep at night and awaken in the morning, our bodies have changed, food
> has metabolized and become part of our bodies, carbon from our bodies has been exhaled as CO2, etc.).
But there is continuity in the fact that the bodys processes are not
interrupted, atoms are replaced, but the system is not interrupted. With
the mind as well. Might adding locality as nother dimension work? Or
make it more clear?
> Please do! No need for me to armchair philosophize, when I can read a
> paper about some fascinating biological procedure!
>
> Hodan Twins:
...
>
Great! Thank you very much. =)
> > Laws of physics? This one, I don't understand, but it is getting late
> > here, so I'll blame my tired brain. ;)
> >
> > Physics reveals a complete symmetry and interchangeability between spaces and time. But we seem to have a bias against
> the latter
> > situation. If we take time-space symmetry seriously, we must recognize this as a bias internal to us. It suggests that
> duplicates are
> > self, as much as the same self is preserved over time.
>
> I think that is a very big step and conclusion to make. Could you divide
> it up into smaller steps? Maybe then I'll see the point.
>
>
> I've attached and excerpt from something I wrote that goes into this in more detail, in particular see the story about the
> "Duplicators vs. Restorers"
Hmm, I did not get any attachments. Maybe they were scrubbed by the list
software? Could you send them directly to my email?
> (Also, I have included also the story of the deep space travelers, which also introduces some of the issues with personal identity,
> particularly as it it pertains to duplication. It's not relevant to the interchangeability of space and time, but you might still
> find it interesting.)
>
> I also found these archived pages of an old member of this list, Lee Corbin, who wrote several articles on personal identiy, which
> are an interesting read, and relate to this topic:
> * "Why Duplicates Are Self: A Proof"
> * "The Pit and the Duplicate"
> * "Continuity of Identity: The Last Refuge of the Soul"
>
>
>
> > Thanks. Note that this article just introduces the idea, but doesn't really argue for it. I would recommend Zuboff's
> linked paper to
> > see the reasons for believing it.
>
> Thank you, will keep that in mind, and have a look at the paper. =)
>
> Thank you as well, for your always great questions and for making me have to think. :-)
Had no idea! And here I thought that you were just drumming up old and
well thought through thoughts, and I was the one who was doing all the
thinking! ;) I find this great for challenging myself and forcing me to
think through what I believe and why I believe it.
The only disadvantage and the one who suffers is my wife who complains
that I write long letters to strangers, and never a long letter to her. ;)
Best regards,
Daniel
>
> Jason
>
>
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > On Sun, 27 Aug 2023, Jason Resch via extropy-chat wrote:
> > >
> > > The question you are asking about below concerns the topic in philosophy known as personal
> identity. That
> > > topic asks: which I
> > > experiences belong to which person's, in other words, how do we define the temporal borders of a
> person.
> > > There are in general three
> > > approaches generally taken:
> > > 1. No-self/Anatta/empty individualism: each observer-moment, or thought-moment is its own isolated
> thing,
> > > there's no such thing as a
> > > self which has multiple distinct thought-moments.
> > >
> > > 2. Continuity theories/closed individualism: either bodily or psychological continuity. A self is
> a
> > > continual things either though
> > > the continuation of some physical body, or some more abstractly defined psychological organization.
> > >
> > > 3. Universalism/open Individualism: There are no bodily or psychological preconditions for an
> experience
> > > being yours, all experiences
> > > are I, and in truth there is only one mind.
> > >
> > > I think #2 leads to contradictions. #1 and #3 are logically consistent. Between #1 and #3, #3 is
> more
> > useful
> > > (it permits decision
> > > theory) and further, there are strong probabilistic arguments for it. For example, those given in
> "One
> > self:
> > > the logic of experience"
> > > which I cite here:
> > >
> > > https://alwaysasking.com/is-there-life-after-death/#10_Open_Individualism_and_the_Afterlife
> > >
> > > One consequence of Open Individualism is that it dissolves any concern of whether some particular
> copy is
> > > you, as all conscious
> > > perspectives are you.
> > >
> > > Jason
> > >
> > >
> > > On Saturday, August 26, 2023, efc--- via extropy-chat <extropy-chat at lists.extropy.org> wrote:
> > > My position is that a separate uploaded copy of me is not me, thus would not grant the
> physical me
> > > immortality. I would
> > > look at it as a mind-seed, or something slightly similar to a part of me that lives on, just
> as a
> > part
> > > of me lives on in
> > > a child, although actually that part is way more of me, than in a child.
> > >
> > > However, when talking about continuity and uploading, I think the ship of theseus uploading
> is much
> > > more interesting from
> > > an identity point of view.
> > >
> > > As some, or all of you already know, imagine that I'm uploaded neruon by neuron, over time. I
> would
> > not
> > > have a break, and
> > > my mind would transition onto the new media.
> > >
> > > I would like to know what the people here who do not believe uploading grants a form of
> immortality
> > > think about that
> > > scenario? Would it fit in with your idea of identity and would you see yourselves being
> "immortal"
> > > through a shop of
> > > theseus procedure if it were possible?
> > >
> > > As for the copy approach, a starting point for me would be that my identity is probably based
> on my
> > > mind, sense of
> > > continuity and location. In a copy, continuity and location would go 2x, and thus not work
> with the
> > > definition of
> > > identity. In a theseus there would be no 2x, both continuity would be perserved, and location
> would
> > be
> > > single.
> > >
> > > Best regards,
> > > Daniel
> > >
> > >
> > > On Sat, 26 Aug 2023, Ben Zaiboc via extropy-chat wrote:
> > >
> > > On 25/08/2023 20:11, Darin Sunley wrote:
> > >
> > > An important component of what a lot of people want out of immortality is not so
> much
> > > continuity
> > > as it is not-experiencing-discontinuity [And no, they're not the same thing].
> > >
> > > If I'm dying of cancer, and you do a brain scan, the resulting upload will
> remember being
> > > me, but
> > > /I'm/ still gonna experience a painful death. And no, killing me painlessly, or
> even
> > > instantaneously, during or in the immediate aftermath of the brain scan doesn't
> solve the
> > > problem
> > > either.
> > >
> > > If "me" is ever on two substrates simultaneously, you may have copied me, but you
> haven't
> > > moved
> > > me, and a copy, by definition, isn't the me I want to be immortal.
> > >
> > >
> > > So this 'me' that you are talking about, must be something that, when copied, somehow
> changes
> > > into 'not-me'.
> > > I don't understand this. If it's an exact copy, how is it not exactly the same? How can
> there
> > not
> > > now be two
> > > 'me's? Two identical beings, in every way, including their subjective experience, with
> no
> > > discontinuity with
> > > the original singular being?
> > >
> > > When I hit 'send' on this message, everyone on the list will get a copy, and I will
> keep a
> > copy.
> > > Which one is
> > > the real message? If they were conscious, why would that make any difference?
> > >
> > > You say "you may have copied me, but you haven't moved me". But how do you move data?
> You make
> > a
> > > second copy
> > > of it then delete the first copy. So destroying copy 1 when copy 2 is made would be
> 'moving
> > me',
> > > yet you say
> > > it wouldn't. Can you clarify why? I can't see (short of a belief in an uncopyable
> supernatural
> > > 'soul') how
> > > this could be.
> > >
> > > This is a crucial point, for those of us interested in uploading, so I think we should
> really
> > > understand it,
> > > yet it makes no sense to me. Would you please explain further?
> > >
> > > Could you also please explain the comment about continuity and not-discontinuity not
> being the
> > > same thing?
> > >
> > > Ben
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