This seems to be an assertion against body-soul dualism, not for it. The trek writers have always sort of somewhat presumed monism, but the subject has come up before with Dr. McCoy disliking the transporter since he considered it a copy/suicide machine. He said it always made a copy and destroyed the original. He simply chose a different convention.But it should, in principle, be possible to make a complete copy (à la Thomas Riker), who feels, thinks.. exactly the same as Will Riker. — Walter
No. Kirk wasn't also split. Kirk was split. Riker was not. Two entirely different scenarios.Fiction is just that: Non-evidence, so it doesn't in any way constitute an argument one way or another.
Apparently Kirk was also split by the transporter, but not identical. So the story changes as the plot requires. — noAxioms
However, I do wonder what exactly identity is. — Walter
Because if I get duplicated (no matter how), is it OK to kill one of the two 'me's'? After all, I am still 'the other one'. — Walter
If you truly had the choice, and you were the original you, would you prefer the copy to be destroyed or the original you. — Walter
The problem is this. What happens to your consciousness when you get transported to a planet? — Walter
How is it you think no-one really gets killed? Is there not a human being standing there? Is it not a human being because of the way it came into existence? Even if one Riker was the original and one a copy (Which was not the case. Both were originals.), like a clone, it's still a person. Thinking, feeling, wanting, acting.Because no-one really gets killed? — Walter
If you have a duplicate that's a functioning person, indistinguishable from the original, then it seems to me anything that needed to transfer did.Yes, of course we have to pretend that. But the deeper problem is, if person is duplicaten, which 'part' of this person cannot be transferred to the duplicate? — Walter
Did I really kill him of is he still alive as Thomas Riker? It seems that if there is no body-soul dualism, the latter is true. But is, in that case, before I kill him, Will's consciousness both in Wil and in Thomas? — Walter
Does knowing this allow anyone to see through the illusion? It does not for me. When I learn how a card trick works, I no longer see the illusion. I see what's really going on, and, when the big moment happens, it is nothing more than turning over a card.I think there is only one way to consistently solve these problems. Identity over time is no less illusory for conscious beings than it is for objects. Just like the Ship of Theseus, there is no fact of the matter as to whether a person is the same person at another time. There is only perception of continuity. — hypericin
This topic has been discussed in this The Necessity of Genetic Components in Personal Identity and Reasons for believing in the permanence of the soul threads. I would recommend taking a look and then editing your OP so the discussion does not start from 0 again. :grin: — Lionino
But it should, in principle, be possible to make a complete copy (à la Thomas Riker), who feels, thinks.. exactly the same as Will Riker.
But suppose that right after the copy is made, I kill Will Riker. Did I really kill him of is he still alive as Thomas Riker? — Walter
You kinda did. Not exactly, but "Identity over time is no less illusory for conscious beings than it is for objects." is pretty much the same thing.I wouldn't quite call it an illusion. — hypericin
Still, the ways we identify our physical selves - things like looks/physical description, finger prints, and retinal scans - stay the same. Yes, we age, which is change. But there is continuity, which is not illusory. If we don't grant continuity in this, then what is continuity? Is the concept of continuity a sham? — Patterner
There's a self that has always been there. — Patterner
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