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Author Topic: Einsteinian Roulette: OOC and NEW PLAYER INFO  (Read 2356602 times)

Empiricist

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2085 on: April 01, 2014, 02:25:44 pm »

If he is "reset" to the same state, doesn't that mean he loses all the points he gained from level ups?
Quote from: Piecewise
...his mind goes back and he returns to the way he was at the time of death...
If that extract was referring to his first death, then Grate would lose all his stat ups, modifications, implantation and gained skills every single time he dies.
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Parisbre56

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2086 on: April 01, 2014, 03:00:33 pm »

Yes, the universe and the Doctor both seem to like giving immortality in return for no stat growth. The universe seems to like keeping humans balanced for some reason and have them earn their god-like powers. Look at amp specialists or ghost ships or... Jim and Miyamoto, I guess.

syvarris

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2087 on: April 01, 2014, 03:40:13 pm »

Quote
We can't pr- oh wait yes we can!
He's still asnwering questions?
Thread now open to questions again.

Quote
Quote

Yes, that's true.  Do you know why?  Because people will just argue about whether or not it is a rose, and someone will bring up that roses have thorns, at which point everyone will check in the most painful way possible.
More because no one will have any clue what the hell you're talking about.
"You know, that flower, it's, um..."
"Orchids?"
"No, it's round..."
"You mean like a dandelion?"
"No, it's red, too..."
"Is it a rafflesia?"
"Why the hell would I get a rafflesia for my girlfriend?"
"Is she a botanist?"
"No!"
"Then I don't know, why did you?"
But how does that make sense in this context?

"Y'know, that thing with Grate."
"You mean his rampant uselessness?"
"No, when he dies."
"Oh.  Got it."

That's far more painless than our discussion.  Even more painless if you put 'death' in the first sentence.  Hence, I said that the discussion causes more pain than the problem.

I'll admit that not knowing the name of a rose is fairly confusing though.



Oh, and I agree with Kri.  Even if there's a perfect clone of me who replaces me with all my memories, it isn't me.  Oddly enough, the first time I encountered that problem was with Autoduel, an old C64 game that had nothing to do with philosophy.

Parisbre56

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2088 on: April 01, 2014, 04:01:04 pm »

Yeah, but what happens when time passes? You'll never be exactly the same, you'll never respond to the same stimuli in the same way. Therefore, it's not the data or the hardware that defines what is you. So what defines what is you?

For me that's one of those questions that has no objective answer and therefore there is no use in thinking about them. If you believe you are you, then for you you are you. If someone else believes you are you, then for that man you are also you. If you believe you are me then for Yu, you are Mi.

Kriellya

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2089 on: April 01, 2014, 04:49:25 pm »

This is part of why I describe it as a 'chain of consciousness'. (and why I ask that we disregard things such being knocked unconscious. We can diverge onto that topic if you'd like :P ) Change is still experience. To me, the important aspect is that I be able to draw a straight line from my current experience to my original experience. A clone is a break in this line, and as such would not qualify as being 'me'. The nanosecond it has a different experience to me (or 'as soon as it is created'), it has diverged in an unrecoverable means. It is no longer me in a way that I feel is fundamental.

And on the hardware front, our brain's are not static objects. Not by a long shot. The data and the hardware does define me. It is all that I am. (as far as we know) As I change, so does it. As it changes, so do I. And if you cloned it, well... let's consider something. See, I'm going to define me very precisely, as a specific configuration of atoms with a very specific location and vector in spacetime. Now, what I'm not going to include in this is that I be a configuration of *specific* atoms. I can be any atoms you want, as long as those atoms are identical and placed in the configuration as specified. This applies a lot of restrictions on how exactly you can make a clone and call it me. In fact, it gives you precisely one way to do so: to replace all of the atoms in the configuration with identical atoms, without changing their configuration, location, or vector. You can do it all at once, or over time, but at the end of the process you will have something that I would agree with you about. You have created a 'clone', but it is still me. This is, you may note, similar to what the human body already does over the course of seven years: completely replace (almost) every atom in itself with a different one.

If you try and create a clone in any other fashion, I will say that he is not me. I will say that his's experience has diverged and that to kill me and leave him would not render me immortal but simply kill me. And, worth noting, he will probably agree with me, since we will have the same philosophy. The same skills. We will be the same in every way, except for one: he will be experiencing the world from 3 feet to the left. Or right. Or 10 seconds after my demise. Whatever configuration we imagine doing this in. And this might seem insignificant, but I can think of nothing more fundamentally different about two individuals.

And yeah, this is all pure philosophy. We cannot and will not reach an objective answer to this until science can create such perfect clones, or develops some similar technology, or discovers the soul. But the discussion can still be fun and interesting! It doesn't have to have a point beyond our entertainment in playing around with these abstract concepts. It has no utility, but then, what utility does ER itself have?

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Xanmyral

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2090 on: April 01, 2014, 05:14:30 pm »

I'm of similar opinion to Kriellya, but more for the fact that the moment you clone someone's mind and awaken it, the moment it perceives the world it does so from a different standpoint than from that of the original, thus making it a separate entity the moment it is cognitive.

So I guess I'd say that the only moment there is really a 'person in two spots at the same time' would be the exact moment the transfer occurs, but immediately after that they diverge into separate entities due to differing experiences. As time goes on, they become more different and differ on separate issues as they experience things separately.

But opinions and philosophy and all that.

Tiruin

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2091 on: April 01, 2014, 05:28:28 pm »

Not actually pure philosophy. :P

It's proven by our years and understanding of humanity and history that in fact--though by far physical and other appearances are 'the same', these things are different. We learn by exposure and we react according to stimuli, as a generality.

Kriellya is right in his (her? I sometimes mistake you for female, if that's ok. x3) knowledge regarding cloning and how it affects the personality and character of said clone--that, and by far we do not exactly understand human medicine [hello amorphous science~], but understand far enough to reach such facts and specific conclusions such as these.
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Kriellya

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2092 on: April 01, 2014, 05:50:38 pm »

Kriellya is right in his (her? I sometimes mistake you for female, if that's ok. x3)

Fine by me, I'm not picky :P
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Parisbre56

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2093 on: April 01, 2014, 06:33:21 pm »

So, just trying to poke holes in your argument here for the sake of arguing.

What if someone plugs your consciousness into a computer, kinda like the matrix? If they connected a bunch of electrodes and life support equipment to your brain and then removed your body and left your brain plugged into the simulation?

Or if they took your body, sliced you to pieces and then put you back together and revive you?

Would that still count as you?

Kriellya

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2094 on: April 01, 2014, 07:06:04 pm »

Arguing for the sake of arguing is the most basic principle of philosophy :P

I would say yes. The continuity of experience (or, occasionally, existence) of the brain is the important thing to me, not the 'jar'. (Incidentally, one of my favorite counter arguments for 'brain in a jar' arguments is by defining the human body as the jar)

Here... well, if you wreck just the body, I'd have little issue with that. I feel that meets a continuity of existence principle. :P  Shred the brain, on the otherhand... well, the far extreme of that is what I referred to earlier, with 'the most practical teleport'. Namely, the most practical way to transport something long distances is (theoretically) not by sending it physically, but digitally as information. To this end, theory says you do what amounts to a destructive read on the subject, recording it's structure as you break it down into component parts. Then you reassemble it at the other end. Even if you used exactly the same molecules for the reassembly, I'd say you've broken the continuity. You have, essentially, created a clone. Creating it some time after my demise does not change that.
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GreatWyrmGold

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2095 on: April 01, 2014, 07:23:51 pm »

Are you going to threaten violence again and record it on tape (despite the fact that said violence would only occur if the tape was deleted)?
...
I may need to listen to it.

The idea is that, in order for me to survive, there has to be an unbroken chain of consciousness back to this point.
Ever hear of Last Tuesdayism? Short version, you have no way of knowing that there was a time before the now. It's an interesting philosophical concept. From such a perspective, it isn't hard to see why the concept of "an unbroken chain of consciousness" is kinda silly. How can you ever know if you are, say, the "real" Kriellya or a perfect clone thereof? (Assume that this is possible in your world.)
Any time that someone cannot ever prove that they are "real" is kinda silly and should be avoided.

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In this framework, a clone is either the creation of a branch in this chain, and the nanosecond after you've created the clone it is no longer me, or a clone is the creation of an entirely different chain that happens to be completely identical up to the point of it's creation.
It's pretty clearly the branch, for the kind of clones we're talking about. After all, if Steve is cloned at t=0, then come t=10, both Steve and Steve' will have identical memories and experiences for negative time; any changes would have to be from t>0.
And with a branching path...well, which path is right, and which is wrong?

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Either way, if you kill me, and end the original chain, I am done. I am not that clone. My experience will cease. And while, to the outside world, there will indeed be absolutely no difference, and the clone will be just as convinced as I was that it is me, I will be just as dead.
Guess what? You're dead. Like I've said, every cell in your body dies and is replaced every couple weeks. You're already gone. And if you're not defining yourself by your body, or by your experiences and personality, what are you defining it by?
Some kind of undefinable spirit or soul? But then, how do you know that your spirit didn't leave your body already, or your soul enter your clone? It's inherently unreasonable to reach for something so undefinable in a debate about definition.

If he is "reset" to the same state, doesn't that mean he loses all the points he gained from level ups?
Quote from: Piecewise
...his mind goes back and he returns to the way he was at the time of death...
If that extract was referring to his first death, then Grate would lose all his stat ups, modifications, implantation and gained skills every single time he dies.
...
Well, crap. Grate's never becoming useful.

But how does that make sense in this context?
"Y'know, that thing with Grate."
"You mean his rampant uselessness?"
"No, when he dies."
"Oh.  Got it."
That's far more painless than our discussion.  Even more painless if you put 'death' in the first sentence.  Hence, I said that the discussion causes more pain than the problem.
I'll admit that not knowing the name of a rose is fairly confusing though.
The problem is, we're not talking about Grate, we're talking about his immortality.

Quote
Oddly enough, the first time I encountered that problem was with Autoduel, an old C64 game that had nothing to do with philosophy.
...?

To me, the important aspect is that I be able to draw a straight line from my current experience to my original experience. A clone is a break in this line, and as such would not qualify as being 'me'. The nanosecond it has a different experience to me (or 'as soon as it is created'), it has diverged in an unrecoverable means. It is no longer me in a way that I feel is fundamental.
And in that nanosecond, the you you consider you has diverged approximately equally from the "you" you were.
And guess what? The kind of clone we're talking about can also draw a straight line from his current experience to the original experience. Why is your claim on that line better than the clone's?

Quote
And on the hardware front, our brain's are not static objects. Not by a long shot. The data and the hardware does define me. It is all that I am. (as far as we know) As I change, so does it. As it changes, so do I.
Then why can't the clone change without being considered not you?

Quote
[L]et's consider something. See, I'm going to define me very precisely, as a specific configuration of atoms with a very specific location and vector in spacetime. Now, what I'm not going to include in this is that I be a configuration of *specific* atoms. I can be any atoms you want, as long as those atoms are identical and placed in the configuration as specified.
And therefore you will be dead, because the atoms in your current body are not the ones that were in your body a year or two ago, let alone the ones which were in your body when you were born.
And let's not get started on the issues with changing your location or velocity without becoming someone else.

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In fact, it gives you precisely one way to do so: to replace all of the atoms in the configuration with identical atoms, without changing their configuration, location, or vector.
...Isn't that basically what Grate does?

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If you try and create a clone in any other fashion, I will say that he is not me.
And he will be entirely justified in saying that you are not you.

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We will be the same in every way, except for one: he will be experiencing the world from 3 feet to the left. Or right. Or 10 seconds after my demise. Whatever configuration we imagine doing this in. And this might seem insignificant, but I can think of nothing more fundamentally different about two individuals.
And how is this different from you moving three feet to the side, or waiting ten seconds?

I would say yes. The continuity of experience (or, occasionally, existence) of the brain is the important thing to me, not the 'jar'.
What about if you copied the consciousness into a computer?
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syvarris

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2096 on: April 01, 2014, 07:31:56 pm »


Heh.  I shouldn't be surprised that me and Kri came up with the same argument.  Oh well, here's the rest of the post.

Honestly, this bears a resemblance to the question "would you want me to lie to you if the absolute only effect of truth would be to make you sad?"  From an absolutely logical, scientific viewpoint, you would want me to lie to you.  But emotionally, you want me to be honest.  At least, nearly every person I've asked has said so.


@Gender of Kri confusion
I think it's the avatar.  It seems vaugely feminine to me, although I have no idea why.

Wonder what people think of me when they see mine.

BIG EDIT:

Last tuesdayism makes me think of dubito ergo sum.  Similar concepts.

Quote from: GWG
Guess what? You're dead. Like I've said, every cell in your body dies and is replaced every couple weeks. You're already gone. And if you're not defining yourself by your body, or by your experiences and personality, what are you defining it by?Some kind of undefinable spirit or soul? But then, how do you know that your spirit didn't leave your body already, or your soul enter your clone? It's inherently unreasonable to reach for something so undefinable in a debate about definition.
True, but you died in bits and pieces.  You never ceased to be.

Quote from: GWG
The problem is, we're not talking about Grate, we're talking about his immortality.

'Kay.  Why not say 'Grate's death thing' or any of the other nonambiguous terms?  There's only one big thing that involves Grate's death in particular, so there's no question what you're talking about.  With a rose, all it's obvious traits are shared by other things.  With Grate's respawns?  You can use any number of terms, and there's no ambiguity.  Hell, we've been discussing it without being confused as to what the other person is referring to even once.

Quote from: GWG
...?

Autoduel didn't have saves.  Instead you could buy a clone, which would be activated upon your death, with the stats you had when you got cloned.  I was kinda bugged by it.

Quote from: GWG
Then why can't the clone change without being considered not you?
The clone is it's own entity.  Regardless of whether or not it diverges from you, it's technically not you.

Quote from: GWG
...Isn't that basically what Grate does?
Yurp.  But I consider him not-immortal for a different reason.

Xanmyral

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2097 on: April 01, 2014, 07:42:03 pm »

@Sylvarris: Flying unicorn cat demon rider.

Parisbre56

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2098 on: April 01, 2014, 07:50:23 pm »

Don't have time to read what you other people wrote, just responding to Kriellya.

Arguing for the sake of arguing is the most basic principle of philosophy :P

I would say yes. The continuity of experience (or, occasionally, existence) of the brain is the important thing to me, not the 'jar'. (Incidentally, one of my favorite counter arguments for 'brain in a jar' arguments is by defining the human body as the jar)
Ah, but in that case, wouldn't it be only the information in your brain left, and whatever functions it performs?
So what if you slowly started replacing the above brain with digital simulation? You got a neuron, transported all its functions into the computer simulation and then transmitted the results back to the brain and the neurons that neuron was connected with. There would be no real loss from removing the neuron. Your brain looses a couple of neurons all the time and nothing changes. And there would be no real change from reconnecting the now simulated neuron. So none of your above conditions are broken.
And you could continue that process until there was no more organic brain left, but only the simulated one.

But what if someone took the wire that connected your brain to the computer during the transfer and split it to two and connected it to another computer, both of which are running exactly the same simulation? Your organic brain would still be receiving the same data from its simulated neurons, only the data would now be in two places. And when the transfer is complete, you'd have exactly the same data existing in two places.

So if something (a user for example) were to come to the first computer and slightly change its seed, you'd now have two people in a simulated world that are both you by your definition and yet they are having different experiences.

Another way of thinking the above is with the Many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, the theory that whenever the universe comes upon a choice in the quantum level, it splits into many worlds and in each of those worlds a different choice was made. So in that case there would be many "yous" created every moment that passes and all of those would fit the above conditions (or else you are dying every moment that passes).

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Here... well, if you wreck just the body, I'd have little issue with that. I feel that meets a continuity of existence principle. :P

Ah, yes, but when a man dies, a few of their neurons may die before they are revived. But you wouldn't accuse a man that had his heart stop for a minute as not being himself now would you? But what if the death lasted longer? As time passes, the brain would get more and more damaged, to the point where memories or other functions could be lost. So at what point, if any, does the revived man with brain damaged stop being you and starts being someone else?

They could also develop delusions. Start thinking they're someone else. All kinds of things you see in bad soap operas. Would that man still be you?

Same thing you could consider with Alzheimer's patients or people with amnesia. Since their minds have degraded, loosing consciousness on some level, are they still them? And if not, at what point did they stop being them and started being someone else?

Quote
Shred the brain, on the otherhand... well, the far extreme of that is what I referred to earlier, with 'the most practical teleport'. Namely, the most practical way to transport something long distances is (theoretically) not by sending it physically, but digitally as information. To this end, theory says you do what amounts to a destructive read on the subject, recording it's structure as you break it down into component parts. Then you reassemble it at the other end. Even if you used exactly the same molecules for the reassembly, I'd say you've broken the continuity. You have, essentially, created a clone. Creating it some time after my demise does not change that.

Again, let me give you a variation of the above argument. You make a portal that not only transports matter in some way but also information, whatever form it might take, light, magnetism, strong and weak force, electrical signals, everything. So when you start crossing the portal, some of your atoms get destroyed and some other atoms replace them on the other side. They continue interacting with the atoms at this side of the portal the same way. So your configuration of atoms remains the same, it's just that the atoms get slowly replaced. But if the portal actually split its output into worlds that look exactly the same during the transportation but then diverge for some reason, you would end up with two instances of you that start being different and may end up being changed into something completely different.

GreatWyrmGold

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Re: Einsteinian Roulette OOC
« Reply #2099 on: April 01, 2014, 09:44:07 pm »

True, but you died in bits and pieces.  You never ceased to be.
If what makes you is the collection of atoms or whatever that make up your body, then you're dying bit by bit.
Look at it this way: If you take apart a car bit by bit, and replace every part with a piece that is fundamentally different, do you have a car made from different parts?

Quote
'Kay.  Why not say 'Grate's death thing' or any of the other nonambiguous terms?  There's only one big thing that involves Grate's death in particular, so there's no question what you're talking about.  With a rose, all it's obvious traits are shared by other things.  With Grate's respawns?  You can use any number of terms, and there's no ambiguity.  Hell, we've been discussing it without being confused as to what the other person is referring to even once.
You're not exactly arguing against the need to find a term...

Quote
Quote from: GWG
Then why can't the clone change without being considered not you?
The clone is it's own entity.  Regardless of whether or not it diverges from you, it's technically not you.
And why is that? What makes you you? Why do the clones' changes make it not-you, but your changes--which are not inherently more or less changing than the clone's--leave you you?

Quote
Quote from: GWG
...Isn't that basically what Grate does?
Yurp.  But I consider him not-immortal for a different reason.
...Which is?
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