It could be said that my kidneys are required to function "most" effectively, yet, we usually don't think of people as having died/lost their identity when they have a kidney removed. — Tarrasque
if we are considering a scenario with teletransportation, we aren't having a discussion that's constrained by the limits of technology. We could imagine flawless organ transplants, — Tarrasque
Also, my point in bringing up cell replacement was this: at 65 years of age, you have undergone so much cell replacement that very little of your physical 20-year-old self remains. If this degree of replacement is equivalent to death, we would have to regard people as dying simply within the process of aging. — Tarrasque
I agree. Perceived differences are either based on a subjective opinion (an attitude based on one's intuition that one's identity simply cannot be duplicated) or one believes that there's a non-physical component to identity (a soul or something similar).I don't think there is a significant difference, — Tarrasque
No (identity is preserved whether Earth-you survives or not). But I think there would be disastrous moral and practical consequences.Would your attitude towards the case change if the teletransporter malfunctioned, leaving Earth-you alive? — Tarrasque
Does one of you have a stronger claim? — Tarrasque
I don't think there is a significant difference, as I am a reductionist about personal identity. Many people are not, and would believe that there is a meaningful distinction to be drawn between the "real them" and a copy of them. They might account for this difference as:
1. The real me is the body that contains my soul, essence, or ego, while the copy does not.
2. The real me is that body from which an unbroken spatio-temporal line can be drawn from it to my origin(in a copy's case, one cannot).
3. In the case of a copy and an original, there is some special property that is only attributable to the original. This special property is what we should be concerned with in preserving our consciousness. — Tarrasque
I don't think you can accurately construe a soul-based theory as reductionism about the self. In what I've read, these types of theories don't say that the self is "reducible to" the soul, rather, it just IS the soul. This is less of a reduction and more of a plain definition. The self would not be a "product or manifestation of something more fundamental," as it would just BE the soul, and the soul would be brute and irreducible. I see an argument for construing those other positions as reductionist.All of these positions can be seen as reductionist, in that they treat personal identity as a product or manifestation of something more real or fundamental:
Psychological continuity
Physical (worldline) continuity
Structural similarity
Hidden essence (soul, etc.)
I agree with you to some extent. Our society places a lot of importance on personal identity, and this leads us to form the conceptions about it that we do. I believe many people hold false beliefs about the nature of themselves, due in large part to this sort of conditioning.I rather think that personal identity is a psychosocial construct. Consequently, it doesn't have a strict definition and delineation, but rather relies on intuitions and conventions that are to some degree fluid and diverse. This is why even those people who don't already have a favorite philosophical theory of self never seem to have a common opinion on such esoteric thought experiments as Davidson's Swampman, teleportation, duplication, etc.
Which is why it is so interesting to ask the questions!And since there is neither a prevailing philosophy nor a prevailing intuition or convention that would apply to such cases, answers vary.
No. Both have equal claim to be "me" (thereby leading to disastrous moral and practical consequences)..
What sorts of intuitions do you have about cases like these? If the idea of teletransportation makes you uncomfortable, why is that? Is a fear of dying justified here? — Tarrasque
One of the transporter people could be you, or none of them could be you, but logically, they both can't be you. — RogueAI
I don't think you can accurately construe a soul-based theory as reductionism about the self. In what I've read, these types of theories don't say that the self is "reducible to" the soul, rather, it just IS the soul. — Tarrasque
I agree with you to some extent. Our society places a lot of importance on personal identity, and this leads us to form the conceptions about it that we do. I believe many people hold false beliefs about the nature of themselves, due in large part to this sort of conditioning. — Tarrasque
And since there is neither a prevailing philosophy nor a prevailing intuition or convention that would apply to such cases, answers vary. — SophistiCat
Which is why it is so interesting to ask the questions! — Tarrasque
That doesn't follow. It depends on how you define "you" in this context.
I'm going by the definition we've all agreed on for "you" and "me" and "I". Those are singular pronouns. They can't refer to more than one person (well, "you" can, but not in the context we're using it). — RogueAI
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