Regarding the identity of particles: A hydrogen atom is a hydrogen atom is
a hydrogen atom.

“So what is this mind of ours: what are these atoms with consciousness?
Last week’s potatoes! They now can remember what was going on in my mind a
year ago — a mind which has long ago been replaced. To note that the thing
I call my individuality is only a pattern or dance, that is what it means
when one discovers how long it takes for the atoms of my brain to be
replaced by other atoms. The atoms come into my brain, dance a dance, and
then go out — there are always new atoms, but always doing the same dance,
remembering what the dance was yesterday.”
–Richard Feynman (The Value of Science)

http://www.strange-loops.com/blog/?p=23


Jason



On Thu, Jul 25, 2019 at 2:04 PM Philip Thrift <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Thursday, July 25, 2019 at 11:44:26 AM UTC-5, Jason wrote:
>>
>>
>> ...
>> Closest continuer theory is the "Copenhagen Interpretation" of personal
>> identity theory. A stop gap to preserve common sense notions in light of
>> paradoxes that imply the old way if thinking is untenable.
>>
>> As with quantum mechanics, common sense personal identity theories are
>> forced to either abandon any connection linking observer moments (like the
>> zero universe interpretation) or to a universalism that links all observers
>> to a single person (like many worlds).
>>
>> Personal identity theories based on psychological or bodily continuity
>> can always be shown to break down, either by holding the body the same and
>> changing the psyche, or holding the psyche the same and changing the body.
>>
>> "Oneself: the logic of experience" by Arnold Zuboff is a good
>> introduction to the reasoning.  Many thinkers, including Shrodinger, Dyson,
>> and Hoyle reached the same conclusion.
>>
>> Jason
>>
>
> One Self:
>
> All experience is equally here, now and mine and all conscious organisms
> are equally I. My argument for this crucial further development is
> presented in ‘One Self – The Logic of Experience’, Inquiry 33 (1991): pp.
> 39-68.
>
> https://philpapers.org/rec/ZUBMUA
>
> Thus would radically differ from the ("real") materialist theory of
> selfhood of Galen Strawson.
>
> (To talk of 100% duplicate persons, A here, B there, is lurking
> functionalism, I think Strawson would say. A and B are not made of the same
> particles.)
>
> @philipthrift
>
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