• Derproid@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    So the interesting part in my mind for this is that you would die and be gone, there would just exist another entity that can perfectly replicate you. Take for example the case of there being two of you, which one is the real one? The original? What if I kill the original? Does the new one become the real you? But what if I don’t kill you but let the duplicate replace your life. Are you the real you trapped in some cell, or is the duplicate the real you living your life?

    My point really is that it’s all a matter of perspective. For everyone else the clone would be the real you, but from your perspective you are the real you and the clone stole your life.

    • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      I’m not my body and I’m not my mind. I am the ethical soul, the decision-making process. If the replacement makes all the same decisions I would, it IS me.

      • Derproid@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The thought process assumes it is a complete and perfect cloning of all aspects we do and don’t understand. The reason the clone is not you is because if I do something to the clone it does not affect you.

        Like if you take a water bottle and clone it, drinking one does not cause the other to be empty. Thus they must be two separate things.

        • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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          1 year ago

          If both the original and the clone are identical, then at that moment they are both me, and neither is more valid than the other. That there’s two of me does not invalidate either version. Neither do their divergences going forward.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        What if something like ChatGPT is trained on a dataset of your life and uses that to make the same decisions as you? It doesn’t have a mind, memories, emotions, or even a phenomenal experience of the world. It’s just a large language data set based on your life with algorithms to sort out decisions, it’s not even a person.

        Is that you?

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            I’m having a hard time imagining a decision that can’t be language based.

            You come to a fork in the road and choose to go right. Obviously there was no language involved in that decision, but the decision can certainly be expressed with language and so a large language model can make a decision.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                It doesn’t matter how it comes to make a decision as long as the outcome is the same.

                Sorry, this is beside the point. Forget ChatGPT.

                What I meant was a set of algorithms that produce the same outputs as your own choices, even though it doesn’t involve any thoughts or feelings or experiences. Not a true intelligence, just an NPC that acts exactly like you act. Imagine this thing exists. Are you saying that this is indistinguishable from you?

    • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Sort of begs the question by assuming there should be one “real you”. Why is this a restriction? Why not two real yous?

      You an hour from now is every bit you as the you that exists 2 hours from now. They’re not identical, but both exist, same space just at different points in time. So why not two “yous”, not identical, at the same time just at different points in space?

      • Derproid@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Because there being two real yous doesn’t make sense. Like you can have two identical things but they can not be the same thing, there must be a you #1 and a you #2. Like if I have two water bottles, they are two identical things but they are not the same thing. Changing one of them does not affect the other, thus they are not the same thing.

        • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’m not saying they’re identical, I’m saying they’re both “you”. That’s different.

          There are many "you"s already. Consider “you” at different points in time. You recognise it’s all the same individual, but they are not identical.

          Hence my last sentence. We’re comfortable with a variety of non-identical "you"s separated by time. So why not a variety of non-identical "you"s at same time, only separated by space.

          Our definition of identity is not tight because it doesn’t have to deal with situations like these. We having a working definition something like “the continuous experience of memories, personality and sensation in a body” that serves to help us identify the “you” from yesterday as the same person as the “you” now. They’re not identical. What they have in common is a shared continuous physicality.

          But if some sci-fi type cloning were possible where two "you"s step out from the one, then both could claim to have a shared continuous physical continuity with the “you” now. And as such both have the same and equal claim on who is the “real” one. As because of that why can’t they both be you? Both with separate ongoing experiences. But both “you” in every bit the same way as you claim to be the same “you” as yesterday.

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      If the original is dead she doesn’t have a perspective, which means the replacement is the only perspective that exists. As such, she is equally the real me just like I am.

      My replacement can have my life if I’m not using it - in fact, I want her to! It’d be a shame if my life went to waste because I was dead.

      Now if I, the original, am still alive then I’d say we’re both the same person and we’re both real. Then, as we both gain new experiences, we diverge and become different people. Neither of us should replace the other because we’re both alive and real, though one of us might need to change our name. Even then? We’ll flip a coin to see who keeps the original name.