On Friday, April 24, 2015 at 5:55:46 PM UTC+2, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>
>
> On 24 Apr 2015, at 02:30, Telmo Menezes wrote:
>
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 1:19 AM, LizR <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>> You should both go to jail, on the basis that both copies of you had the 
>> same consciousness as the person who committed the murder, and therefore 
>> you are both equally responsible (leaving aside considerations of free will 
>> etc)
>>
>
> I agree. I would be curious to know if anyone disagrees with this, and why.
>
>
>
> Now, I agree. And Liz gave two good arguments, one pure 3p, and the other 
> is terms of moral punishment. The first one is enough, but the second one 
> make sense too.
>
> Another "terrible question": do people have the right to torture copies, 
> when they accepted the protocols, that is with consent made at the time 
> before the duplication?
>
> Should that be made illegal?  (assuming the technology, comp, etc.)
>

Depends on what we mean by the term "illegal" or "jail". If "jail" or 
"legality" turns out to be just some unreflected form of confinement or 
isolation, then we only replicate our tendency towards another form of 
vengeance justice. This seems medieval/savage, which is plausible; but what 
if we assumed they are less savage than us because they've grown bored?

Because I'm not sure we need "forms of punishment" a priori in all 
scenarios of justice. In such sufficiently advanced setting, where we can 
e.g. copy Telmo, we can define crime as something like: "form of amnesia 
relative to theological aspects/questions of personhood", then justice is 
restored when that amnesia is either lifted or the person decides to move 
to a geography where said amnesia can be lived/dreamed by people who choose 
it theologically; where it can theologically kick back. Unfortunately, this 
opens up territoriality of geography, which I'd like to not have to do. 
Ideally, we'd like to lift that amnesia, perhaps. This may be fuzzy, but at 
least more precise than faith in weirdly justified spans of time for 
"confinement for security of society". 

I could see it as the job of scientists, mystics, and artists to grapple 
with this huge problem of how to make amnesic loss of theological question 
of personhood, accessible to such persons again (who committed "crime"). 
I'm not sure the term "illegal" or "crime" would still apply in such 
setting; closer to "they forgot stuff/questions". So "crime" would be 
closer to restoration of memory and bear on "how did we get here in local 
history?" which would give clues to undo the imbalance and appears more as 
a memory problem, than a problem with "Telmo" (sorry for using you like 
this, man ;-))

Not that I would assume a clear solution (we're attempting good/evil 
here...); just assuming we can be less naive and hand waving with theology 
and question of dream/reality than we are today, which is a high price tag. 
But we could reasonably assume a lot more histories with programming 
virtual worlds, altered states of mind, theological practice and nuance, 
technological tools, engineering and management of trance/ecstasy, maybe 
some advance on problem of evil etc.

I try to exercise setting up such scenario's fictionally, but it is 
difficult to find ones that are fun, where Goedel does not bite back too 
much, lol. Thanks for posting/sharing, Telmo. This is more fun than all the 
usual and yet understandable preaching for physical universe, politics, 
environment etc. Closer to some of Wei Dai's thoughts and writings as well. 
PGC    

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