SolarWind         
         
Philosophim         
         Both worlds are materially identical by definition. However, they differ in who one *is* in this world. If I am person A or Z, I have the body and the memories of person A or Z, respectively. — SolarWind
Mick Wright         
         
jgill         
         Since the worlds are both altogether different and materially identical — SolarWind
SolarWind         
         Of course they are identical. This is the core of the proof, it is not a bug, it is a feature.If these are parallel worlds that are identical, then they have the same "histories", and person A in one world would have the same memories and history as person A in the other world.
SolarWind         
         
SophistiCat         
         
Kenosha Kid         
         This proof supports dualism and refutes monism, since in monism world A and world Z would have to be identical, since they are materially identical. — SolarWind
SolarWind         
         
Constance         
         
Kenosha Kid         
         As already mentioned, the worlds should not exist simultaneously, but alternatively. Thus the question does not arise "where" these worlds are. — SolarWind
A simple question: Would it make no difference to you whether you lead your current life or the life of another person, for example George Clooney, of course including his body and memories? — SolarWind
SolarWind         
         As others have pointed out, you postulate a difference between materially identical worlds, then conclude that these materially identical worlds are different thus dualism. Your conclusion is in your premises: a circular argument. — Kenosha Kid
SophistiCat         
         You simply compare the set {A*,B,C,...,X,Y,Z} with the set {A,B,C,...,X,Y,Z*}, where the star indicates which life you would live in the corresponding world. — SolarWind
SolarWind         
         
SolarWind         
         
Kenosha Kid         
         You simply compare the set {A*,B,C,...,X,Y,Z} with the set {A,B,C,...,X,Y,Z*}, where the star indicates which life you would live in the corresponding world.
It is possible that the persons are materially identical in pairs, i.e. A* =(material) A, B =(material) B, ... , Y =(material) Y, Z =(material) Z*. — SolarWind
DoppyTheElv         
         
SolarWind         
         In set theory, these would be the same set. Your insistence on a difference nonetheless is precisely the circularity in your argument. This is not a subtle point. — Kenosha Kid
SolarWind         
         I suppose one could say that every brainstate is me? So as you say, as I forget my name, there will be a brain state that correlates with it. — DoppyTheElv
DoppyTheElv         
         
Kenosha Kid         
         In set theory, these would be the same set. Your insistence on a difference nonetheless is precisely the circularity in your argument. This is not a subtle point.
— Kenosha Kid
Let's assume that reincarnation is true.
Would it make a difference to you which creature you were reborn as? — SolarWind
DoppyTheElv         
         
SophistiCat         
         When you go to the toilet, how can you say you are the same person afterwards as before? — SolarWind
Kenosha Kid         
         Sure, reincarnation could be a nice tool to convey a point which Solar might want to make. Specifically a point about personal identity. So you're kind of just red herring it. — DoppyTheElv
DoppyTheElv         
         
Kenosha Kid         
         I think the original argument can be put easier with clones.
The good old teletransporter problem would have sufficed to make the point that Solar is trying to make.
... — DoppyTheElv
Materially indistinguishability is not sufficient to show dualism. All the electrons in the universe are identical, but can still be different in physical ways (state). They can also have identical state: a ground state hydrogen atom over there can have the same state as and is materially indistinguishable from a ground state hydrogen atom here. — Kenosha Kid
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