RogueAI
Manuel
However, if they could replace it incrementally and guarantee I was conscious the whole time, I don't consider that death, Does anyone else share this intuition? — RogueAI
180 Proof
Tom Storm
RogueAI
Continuity of phenomenal self-awareness is personal identity
fishfry
if they could replace it incrementally and guarantee I was conscious the whole time, I don't consider that death, — RogueAI
BC
180 Proof
L'éléphant
Are you asking this for purely philosophical inquiry, or for medical science and the public?If someone told me they were going to duplicate and replace my brain with a mechanical one (and dispose of the organic one), I would consider that death. However, if they could replace it incrementally and guarantee I was conscious the whole time, I don't consider that death, Does anyone else share this intuition? — RogueAI
L'éléphant
noAxioms
I'd have said that it was a replacement of everything below the neck, not above it. You didn't get a new head. The head got your body. You're gone.It always puzzles me whenever an attempt is made to transplant a head. Recently, they had transplanted mice heads. It lived for a day. But there's also a procedure done on monkey decades ago. The monkey survived for hours. — L'éléphant
I fall asleep and my personal identity survives, even if I've been unconscious indefinitely. A full replacement with a mechanical brain that was somehow loaded up with all the memories would be no different in principle than just waking from anesthesia. In practice, while I have no problems with the mechanical thinker being conscious, it just wouldn't feel the same. You'd have to rig it up to react to all the chemical changes and such, and not just be a bunch of digital circuits.Continuity of phenomenal self-awareness is personal identity, — 180 Proof
Lots of games to play here. Would you consider a star-trek style transporter to be death? The machine takes you apart down to the atom and rebuilds an identical one somewhere else. The memories are there, but is it you? What if it's a copy and they don't destroy the original. Is the new one you now?If someone told me they were going to duplicate and replace my brain with a mechanical one (and dispose of the organic one), I would consider that death. — RogueAI
Bret Bernhoft
Angelo Cannata
Haglund
If someone told me they were going to duplicate and replace my brain with a mechanical one (and dispose of the organic one), I would consider that death. However, if they could replace it incrementally and guarantee I was conscious the whole time, I don't consider that death, Does anyone else share this intuition? — RogueAI
Haglund
Maybe they have already done this on you — Angelo Cannata
Haglund
Haglund
If someone told me they were going to duplicate and replace my brain with a mechanical one... — RogueAI
I like sushi
Haglund
Perhaps if you read the OP and the link you would see? — I like sushi
Agent Smith
Haglund
The link I provided you numb nut :D — I like sushi
Haglund
Haglund
Old wine in a new bottle: The Ship of Theseus. What if we reassemble your brain parts. What then? — Agent Smith
Angelo Cannata
Haglund
L'éléphant
Funny you say this. Our identity is tied to a mirror, if I may say so. I almost agreed with you -- but then, first thing you look at if you want to know if you're still you, is your reflection on the mirror. You don't question why your mind has changed.I'd have said that it was a replacement of everything below the neck, not above it. You didn't get a new head. The head got your body. You're gone. — noAxioms
Agent Smith
particles being you, can never be you again. — Haglund
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