Teaching the future with the greatest minds of the past (er, their past, so our future still). Think about it, how often does someone say " I really wish I could have met 'x'"? The ability to learn from artists, debate philosophy with those who refine it, learn from history by asking it personally. You know how much I'd pay to be able to debate art with Stan Lee if he croaks before I had a chance to meet him?Dismal purple said:What is even the point of uploading your brain to a computer?
Family who can talk to their ancestors, learning what happened during their lives. It'd be endlessly useful.
This debate is the same one they have for the teleporters in Star Trek. Using a computer to make an identical map of your body while breaking it into it's composite atoms, then transporting the mass somewhere else, or using vats of matter to rebuild you. Is what comes out the other side the same person as what went in? No.Reeve said:I disagree. Do you realize that every particle that makes up your body right now is different from the particles it was a few years ago. Maybe even a few months ago. And yet you are still...you. If the entire composition of your body can be changed over time and yet you still survive then why should it be any different when it's digital or silicon?Abandon4093 said:Of course it's not.Bealzibob said:But it is the same, presuming the technology is sufficient, it physically will be the exact same person. If the program that simulates your brain is made correctly it will be the exact same person as you. Not a clone, not a copy, you. The same person whose body died. Like I said, as long as you bridge the gap, so that your memory/thoughts maintain the narrative you will be the same person.thaluikhain said:SNIP
No matter how good a copy is, it's still a copy.
You can't transfer your consciousness, all you could do is replicate it.
The key thing is the structure. When all the particles are replaced in your body the thing that is preserved is structurally & functionally the same as before. A digital version of your mind just has to be structurally and functionally identical and so long as that criteria is met: It's you.![]()
The same way that you of this second isn't the same you of last second, or the same you of two days ago. As you gain new stimuli, forming new memories and the like, you change. Conceptually, you are nothing more then your experiences as interpreted by your personality. If I made an identical replica of you, the second it had a thought you did not, it's officially someone else. If I was to replace my body with machinery, it'd be someone who knows everything I did, plus what it's like to go through Dr. Robotnik's Roboticizer.
And that isn't a bad thing. For all you'll ever know, it's the same person, and for the world it'll be a success because what will remain will talk like you, think like you, and know what you knew. The only way to download your consciousness into a machine would be to lock out all new stimuli, putting you in a loop that never changes, never learns more.
When I was a child, I had no soft spot. When they chose to do surgery at birth to correct it, they nicked something during surgery that disabled my skin's ability to feel pain. Over the years I've had an amazing time surviving various accidents and the like, and have metal grafted to two ribs and right leg. From a simple standpoint of structure, these would be no different then the hard point attachments needed to graft in place new technology. I am partly metal, am I human?
When technology finally masters splicing nerve impulses to sensors that would allow me to wear a new skin of circuitry and feel pain again, would I still be me? I don't think so, but I don't think it'll matter.
I personally am all for transhumanism. The ability to take what we are, and use technology to drastically alter ourselves to adapt would start out paltry, sure. We'd start with prosthetic alterations, followed by wetware, then biological machinery, and finally we'd be free to do everything. Live on other planets, breath water, connect ourselves to the overmind, be cloud computing..
No, dear god no. When you figure yourself perfect, when there is no more to learn or do or see. When you've killed art and creativity for ration and order you kill what actually makes us human. That's not transhumanism at all, it's trans-speciesism, the end of humanity for what comes next. And whatever that is, will stagnate and rust and die as it'd be all there is left to do. No, I'd always toss in the mad to gum up the works a bit. There must always be the thirst for what comes next, otherwise what's the point to it all?Chaosian said:I did a 20 minute presentation in Grade 12 about Transhumanism, and a paper in University on it so I know a little of the ins and outs of the concept. People seem to be forgetting here that Transhumanism is not a new concept, in fact, it's a concept about as old as it gets. As Transhumanism is simply the enhancing of the human condition through means of technology, one trip down to Wikipedia will remind you that Transhumanist themes are present even in Gilgamesh and his journey for the Fountain of Youth.
As for what's cool about it, I can't wait to see a super-intelligence and the Singularity. Like one of those Daleks that can't wait to be exterminated by the better model, I can't wait to see AI life start evolving into a flawless neo-humaity with perfect order and harmony, and absolute reason and rationality.