On Sat, Jun 20, 2015  Terren Suydam <[email protected]> wrote:

>> If they're identical then the number of bodies is irrelevant, there was
>> only one person in those 2 sealed rooms before anyone opened a door and
>> there is only one person in those 2 sealed rooms after one of them opened a
>> door. Opening a door changed nothing important.
>>
>
> > You're treating the room as a black box, but obviously the meat of this
> thought experiment is what goes on inside the room.
>

I don't know what that means.


> > No duplicator experiment is possible in which the copies don't diverge.
> The only way they could stay identical after the duplication is if they
> shared the exact same space and time,
>

If that were true then exchanging their position would cause a difference,
but it doesn't, not objectively and not subjectively either. Even the
universe doesn't know or care if the exchange really happened or not, so
why should you?

And consciousness doesn't even have a position. Does your consciousness
really exist inside a bone box sitting on your shoulders when you're in
Berlin looking at a picture of Dayton Ohio while thinking about the Great
Wall of China? It sure doesn't feel that way and the way things feel is
what consciousness is all about.


> >> Subjectively there is no way to know what physical place you are in
>> unless you are given stimulation of some form the outside world.  If you
>> and "another" identical person were looking at each other in a symmetrical
>> room and then I instantaneously exchanged your positions neither you nor
>> the "other" guy would not notice a difference, and a outside observer would
>> not notice a difference, and even the universe itself would not notice a
>> difference. If subjectively it makes no difference and objectively it makes
>> no difference then I think it's safe to say that it just makes no
>> difference, and in this context the word "another" has no meaning.
>>
>
> > But that only works if the room is symmetrical. And it's hard to
> understand why a fact about the room would have any bearing on the identity
> of the two duplicates.
>

Because if the room were not symmetrical then the two would immediately
start to form different memories.

>> In fact was I even telling the truth when I said I exchanged the
>> positions? There would be no way to tell and no reason to care.
>>
>
> > But only if the room was symmetrical. If the wall behind me was black
> and the wall behind my duplicate was white, I would notice instantly if you
> switched us, or whether you were telling the truth about having done so.
>

Yes, but so what? Obviously you can arrange things so that the two
immediately start to form different memories, but my point is that it
doesn't have to be that way and is not inherent in the body duplication
process itself.


> >> If the two are identical then their experiences are identical too and
>> so there is only one experience not two because the experience of John
>> Clark being alive is a adjective not a noun. Red is a adjective and car is
>> a noun, if there are 2 red cars there are 2 cars but only one red and if
>> one car is destroyed red still exists. Right now only one chunk of matter
>> in the universe behaves in a Johnclarkian way, but in your thought
>> experiment that is no longer true.
>>
>
> > In no duplication experiment is it even possible in principle for that
> to be true.  You seem to be saying that duplication is impossible.
>

I don't follow.


> > If it helps, let's say the door is at the end of a 1000ft hallway and
> the duplicator is on the opposite end. It will take you and/or your copy a
> minute to traverse the length. Enough time to begin arguing about which
> John Clark is going to be the sacrificial lamb.
>

Assuming both bodies were at the end of identical 1000 foot hallways there
would not be two John Clark's but only one, and that would remain the case
until random quantum variations caused macroscopic changes in the 2 brains
and they started forming different thoughts. I don't know exactly how long
that would take but my guess would be more than a few seconds but less than
a few hours. So the logical thing to do would be to make a dash for that
door and open it as soon as possible before that divergence happens,
because once divergence happens there really would be two John Clark's and
only one can survive. Before divergence it wouldn't matter which hand
reached the door first, the only important thing is that the door be opened
fast.

  John K Clark

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