If some arbitrarily technologically advanced civilization decided it would be a cool idea to put you under, freeze you to absurdly cold temperatures, cut you in half [edit...cut into left and right halves right down the midline] and then exactly duplicate and attach each original half to it's opposing duplicate so that there were now two of you who were then thawed and revived in a non destructive manner would you be both people even though "you" would in that case now constitute two completely separate persons?
If we say "you" would instead now be dead does that mean that someone who suffers extensive brain damage (perhaps limited to one hemisphere) is also dead?
Is there any limit to the number of times a person could be split?
Suppose a person were 'duplicated' millions of times and one of those persons lived long enough to have their life extended and their body artificially repaired in such a way that they lived for thousands even millions of years, would the person who was born those million years ago have both died almost a million times and also lived to be a million of years old?
Is it possible that an "individual" "dies" essentially every time their mindstate changes in any way whatsoever so that a single person is in fact zillions of discrete people over their lifetimes who remain oblivious to their infintesimaly short lifetimes due to the illusion of perfect continuity that memory provides?
final "death" then is just the point at which new fools who still think they are "you" stop being generated?
I suppose I should read some philosophy book if I really care about these immensely weighty issues but I honestly ascribe about as much value to the drunken thoughts of a bar fly and the collective musings of polytubbies as I would to such philosophical tomes.
If we say "you" would instead now be dead does that mean that someone who suffers extensive brain damage (perhaps limited to one hemisphere) is also dead?
Is there any limit to the number of times a person could be split?
Suppose a person were 'duplicated' millions of times and one of those persons lived long enough to have their life extended and their body artificially repaired in such a way that they lived for thousands even millions of years, would the person who was born those million years ago have both died almost a million times and also lived to be a million of years old?
Is it possible that an "individual" "dies" essentially every time their mindstate changes in any way whatsoever so that a single person is in fact zillions of discrete people over their lifetimes who remain oblivious to their infintesimaly short lifetimes due to the illusion of perfect continuity that memory provides?
final "death" then is just the point at which new fools who still think they are "you" stop being generated?
I suppose I should read some philosophy book if I really care about these immensely weighty issues but I honestly ascribe about as much value to the drunken thoughts of a bar fly and the collective musings of polytubbies as I would to such philosophical tomes.
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