>Yeah, Frank Tipler proposed this more seriously,
> Many trans-humanists hate this proposal because, hey, no continuity.
> Of course this means an eternal return.
But it is nothing to fear - you
will not experience your life over
again
Ok, but if my life is a nightmare (for example) then, there is something to worry about.
Lawrence Crowell
> To make things a bit more bizarre, if
space is flat and infinite R^3 then
there will be regions out there with
duplicates of you.
Even if it is fact of our reality I don't feel the pain, when duplicate of me, has a wounded finger. She is not me, and duplicate of me in future, will not be me either. Do you agree?
By the way, if I understand you correctly, you equate time and space, so probably you have different views on these issues than Dr. Peter Rowlands - he
claims that time is radically different from space, absolutely continuous and irreversible. I'm not suggesting that this view is better than yours - I'm just saying :)
Brent
> It would the same the unique "return"
by the identity of indiscernibles.
This principle is not so obvious for everybody - for example on this article:
https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2015/02/concepts_of_sameness_part_4.html
mathematician Dr. John Baez presents some objections regarding identity of indiscernibles.
Spudb
> Yeah, Frank Tipler proposed this more
seriously, and Sabine Hossenfelder,
more recently., speculatively, via
quantum mechanics.
Great :) I can't find it. Could you put a link please?
Russell Standish
> Of course this means an eternal return.
But it is nothing to fear - you
will not experience your life over
againOk, but if my life is a nightmare (for example) then, there is something to worry about.
Lawrence Crowell
> To make things a bit more bizarre, if
space is flat and infinite R^3 then
there will be regions out there with
duplicates of you.Even if it is fact of our reality I don't feel the pain, when duplicate of me, has a wounded finger. She is not me, and duplicate of me in future, will not be me either. Do you agree?
By the way, if I understand you correctly, you equate time and space, so probably you have different views on these issues than Dr. Peter Rowlands - he
claims that time is radically different from space, absolutely continuous and irreversible. I'm not suggesting that this view is better than yours - I'm just saying :)
https://www.google.com/amp/s/bsahely.com/2018/06/17/are-there-alternatives-to-our-present-theories-of-physical-reality-by-peter-rowlands/amp/
