JohnSmith wrote:Joe, I think we've come to an area we won't agree on. You say that you're ok with the idea of dieing, as long as there is a 'you' that survives. I think that you will change your mind as you're lying on your deathbed, waiting for the end. Maybe I'm wrong.
You are. I've been debating this issue with people for over a decade. Usually, if I hang in there long enough and am patient and clear, they eventually come around to the realization that they haven't got a philosophical leg to stand on. You're reasoning from intuition, which is based on experience, and we have no experience living in a world where it is possible to duplicate a person. So you're convinced of your conclusions, even though you can't explain why, and there is no logic behind them. Intuition leads us astray when something as new as this comes along.
(This is similar to the intuitive reaction people had to the idea of heart transplants before they became available, but even more so.)
Of course, when the time actually comes and people have a chance to get used to dealing with duplicates, their intuition will change and it won't be such a struggle to think about it clearly.
JohnSmith wrote:And back to Joe. I haven't had time to find or read the book, but I doubt it would change my mind. (I will try and find it, though!) I see a large difference between a forking of the mind and a slow replacement. Either way, I'm happy with my crutch.
No doubt, but I fear it's going to lead to your unnecessary death. Do read the book if you can; it's a little dated (it too neglects the application of fuzzy logic to personal identity, which is really all that's needed to resolve the problems with Locke's original thesis), but its arguments on gradual vs. discontinuous replacement are detailed and sound.
JohnSmith wrote:I like thought experiments instead of philosophy.
Er... what do you think philosophy is based on? It's all thought experiments. For any given theory of personal identity, you posit various scenarios, see what that theory would imply, and then check that conclusion against standard conceptions of the term. For example: suppose you believe that person A is the same as person B if they have the same color and pattern of socks. We can easily falsify this theory of personal identity with two thought experiments: (1) you and I happen to be wearing the same color and pattern of socks; and (2) you take off the socks you're wearing and put on different ones. In experiment 1, the theory identifies us as the same person, even though all would agree we are not; and in theory 2, it would identify you as a different person after the sock switch, when all would agree you're the same.
If a theory can't handle these common, every-day cases, then there's no point trying to apply it to the tricky ones. The thing is, most intuition-based theories of identity fall apart on currently-feasible thought experiments, such as deep hypothermic surgery or physical disability. A good theory of personal identity handles these just fine.
JohnSmith wrote:Just to posit a scenario, say you went to the hospital, got your mind uploaded. Ok, it's you. I don't argue that. And there's a physical you.
As far as the physical you is concerned, nothing has happened. So you walk in, sit down in the chair. Then the nurse comes in. Do you follow her when she says, "Ok, we're all done, this way to the euthanasia chamber?"
Sure (assuming of course that I believe her, and that she can give me a good reason why I shouldn't be even happier being two instead of one). Why not?
Let me posit a scenario back to you: suppose we discover that, every night for the last three months, aliens have been sneaking into your bedroom at night, killing you in your sleep, taking you apart atom by atom for study, and then replacing you with an exact atom-for-atom duplicate. Would you kill yourself before going to sleep again? Remember, this has been going on for some time.
I sure wouldn't, because who cares? If the duplicate is exactly the same as the original, then it
is me, and I survive this nightly procedure just fine — in keeping with the common-sense conclusion that I am the same person today that I was yesterday, regardless of what might have happened while I slept.
Best,
- Joe