Just thinking
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 5,169
Just Thinking - one of the issues with this discussion is the concept that consciousness is being "transported".
From a purely materialistic perspective, that's not the case; if consciousness is a combination of processes, quantum states, etc., then a "transported" person's consciousness isn't actually being transported - it's being duplicated. Even destroying the original during the process wouldn't make the copy become the original. It would simply terminate the existence of the original while starting a brand new existence of a second person. The fact that the copy would believe itself to be the original - and even have all the original's memories - simply means that the illusion of being the original is perfect for the copy.
Yes -- I believed this to be the case all along:
I find it hard to reject that if clones are possible, then the original cannot be transported, only a duplicate can come out of the other end -- even if only one person is materialized. Once disintegrated, I am essentially dead, and whatever comes out the other end is a copy ...
For whatever time period you allow, you have two of the same person which I believe cannot exist -- soul or no soul.
... the problem is finding out if the person that walked in felt as if no time had passed during the transport and that they felt a continuous line of consciousness. This may prove an impossible test to anyone other than the person that walked in.
Personally, I doubt it.
If you set up a camera that recorded the transfer (assume that the sending and receiving stations are merely a few meters apart), the entire cycle of destruction/creation could be recorded... and the copy could be shown the video as proof they weren't the original, no matter how they feel about it. And if the original wasn't destroyed... well, there you have it. Replication is not continuance of the original.
Agreed.
From a non-materialistic perspective, it's simply impossible to do at all. From this viewpoint, consciousness would be independent from the physical state of being. Since our hypothetical "transporter" supposedly only reconstructs the physical and quantum state, the "self" would be lost in the translation. In this case, you'd end up with a comatose body that was never self-aware to begin with.
Yes ... being somewhat analogous to transporting momentum.