It’s not about free speech. It’s about the cancellation. The physical shutting down. No one on the right is telling the left to stop arguing and debating and talking — Fire Ologist
The right wing was never upset about speech being shut down, at least not on the top ten list of the problems with wokeness. — Fire Ologist
It’s the physical changes to culture - men competing in women’s sports; men who choose to be called ‘women’ with outrage when not obeyed — Fire Ologist
You asked me a question under which that is a direct, relevant and telling response. If you do not want to talk about Identity, the transporter and all its implications, you could have said that instead of stringing this exchange along to an end that tells me you are not open to discussions that challenge your presumptions. — AmadeusD
1. As far as the federal government limiting what the federal agencies do and say - that is called: how it works. That has nothing to do with speech rights in the public sphere.
2. [educational institutions] are such bad judges of what is "truth" and who has "power" and who is "victim".
3. Journalists, or opinion makers? Newspeople, or propagandists? — Fire Ologist
By pointing out that people cannot alter the world with speech as much as they claim they can, and that people overestimate the powers of speech, my point is that you have no reason to censor others. That’s it. — NOS4A2
The Daily Mail itself outed it's behaviour as click-baiting in 2011, labeling the issue as a myth. — AmadeusD
This is no longer a relevant question, and its one I've directly answered in two different ways. Please review. — AmadeusD
I am asking the question: if the only consideration is that it is the same atoms, what if the transporter does use the same atoms, however, those atoms need to spend T time unconnected. When they get reassembled afterwards, did you survive that? What if T is 1 million years?I can't understand what you're trying to describe here. This doesn't seem to say anything that could result in the experiment we're talking about. Can you please be clearer? — AmadeusD
I think its entirely straightforward and have given you the reasons why. Its an air-tight reason. — AmadeusD
Hmm. Unfortunately, I think logically, No. This instantiates that you are two people. — AmadeusD
The whole topic of personal identity, the transporter problem, and this thread, all concern continuity consciousness.I cannot understand what you're talking about. The analogy is that it is not relevant how many ,or which atoms are involved. For two reasons. Both of which make this an utterly ridiculous question (to me... it may be entirely reasonable on your understanding of what i've said). These are:
1. It had nothing whatsoever to do with consciousness. [...]
2. It is 100% true, without any possible discussion, that people lose limbs, multiple limbs etc... and remain exactly the person they were — AmadeusD
- The fact that woke issues/analysis was so precisely tuned by 1993 shows how the woke attitude became ubiquitous in the 1980s. — Fire Ologist
W can reason that if his eyes are not blue, then { X would be seeing two people with blue eyes; X could then reason that if his eyes are not blue, then { Y would be seeing only one person with blue eyes; Y could then reason that if his eyes are not blue, then { Z would not see anyone with blue eyes; Z would therefore leave on the first evening; } else { since Z didn't leave, on the second night Y and Z would realize they both have blue eyes; } } else { since Y and Z didn't leave, on the third night X, Y and Z would realize they all have blue eyes; } } else { since X, Y and Z didn't leave, on the fourth night, W, X, Y and Z would realize they all have blue eyes; }
A perfect replica is still a replica. Is that a bit clearer? If you are not the exact atoms that make up my body, you couldn't be me. You could be a replica. — AmadeusD
You disagree that someone who loses their legs (or other body parts) is still hte same person? — AmadeusD
I am suggesting that:
1. Bodily continuity is thought about wrongly (i.e without the spatio-temporal aspect here noted); and
2. That all this does is defeat certain claims (bodily continuity ones).
Perhaps you've misunderstood me. — AmadeusD
There can't be two yous. There can be two Mijins which are not identical. — AmadeusD
Right, and most of us accept Copied, and you too, but you want to tackle Sent on their own ground (show them it's a quagmire), so it's tiresome if I don't join you on that ground? — bongo fury
What's consciousness got to do with it? Copied doesn't need consciousness. (Nor unconsciousness of course.) It just needs a reliable basis for individuation (same what? different what?). — bongo fury
I'll answer again: nothing; only my continued corporeal integrity matters. — bongo fury
Radical Lastthursdayism says, that's constantly true, all the time - your existence is being renewed every moment and your memories are effectively implanted. — flannel jesus
I didn't content they did. Not sure where this is coming from. — AmadeusD
This doesn't have much relevance to my position, or the claim, to be clear. For sake of discussion, there will be no specific amount. You can lose both legs and still be alive, and you. It's a silly question, in context. That's not the belittle it. It just has no reasonable avenue to a response. — AmadeusD
It removes the potential for my first-person to disappear, but someone to still be me. Which seems ridiculous and intuitively hogwash. — AmadeusD
Mijin If spatial-temporal continuity is required to maintain identity, then your case adds nothing, the subject is killed no matter what. — hypericin
From the third person perspective yes that's what it boils down to. The question is what about the first-person perspective of the person that entered the transporter. Is he gone entirely?If it is not required, then your case reduces to, "How much damage can someone sustain before becoming a new person?"
It seems more realistic to infer episodes of relative coherence among otherwise fleeting and unconnected moments of consciousness? — bongo fury
They deserve identifying with (or as) one person because they arose in that particular (spatiotemporally continuous) brain and body. — bongo fury
It seems crucial to the viability and identity of an organism, at least? Pre-sci-fi, of course. — bongo fury
Really? I suppose there are edge cases, like that of conjoined twins? But generally we, like the ship of Theseus, maintain our personal identity by losing and replacing a few planks at a time. — bongo fury
I think this is the correct answer to the branch-line case. Any "one" who is me, yet occupied different atoms and extracts difference resources from the environment to maintain homeostatis, and occupies a different "moment' in space, cannot be me. — AmadeusD
I think this is a really stupid 'paradox' personally. A ship is "that ship" because of what people call it. There isn't, that I can see, a physical boundary to the identity of a utility/object. — AmadeusD
Independent medical exam? — bongo fury
Spatiotemporal continuity (with me). — bongo fury
But so (by hypothesis) will any number of duplicates be convinced of their continuity with Kirk. So what? I'm convinced I'm Napoleon. — bongo fury
Okay, tell me what you think is wrong with this answer just to make sure that we are on the same page: we might be able to introduce some sort of criteria for determining if someone could be considered to have survived based on the survival of brain function as a result of a certain X. If they pass a cognitive test at a certain X after being transported, then we can say that at that particular X, the person that was transported survived. Thus, it is no longer arbitrary (at least in terms of small differences in X not corresponding to meaningful differences in brain functioning) given we can determine how much someone must be the same after being transported to be considered to have survived. — ToothyMaw
I am sorry but I hate this problem. Why would anyone assume the Star Trek transporter could ever possibly work? If one assumed it could possibly work, one could assume any number of solutions to any number of assumed problems. — Fire Ologist
I actually think there's an argument for consciousness NEVER being continuous, period. Like even just you, now, not being transported. There's an argument that the you that is experiencing the middle of this sentence now is a different you than the one experiencing the end of the sentence now. That continuity of experience is equally illusory in a way, all the time. — flannel jesus
Now Kant's idea of the Beautiful is judged by the criteria of the form not the object, for example, the art form, say, literature. — Antony Nickles