Sorry to go off topic so soon :-) but at first glance the answer to this would appear to depend completely on the answer to Bruno's "yes doctor" - if one's consciousness is the result of computation at some level, and assuming Bruno's chain of reasoning is correct, then a destructive upload should be possible, and a conservative upload would give you a 50-50 chance of finding yourself uploaded. If there is something wrong with comp, e.g. non Turing emulable processes are involved, then it seems unlikely that any type of upload will upload you - unless you have a soul or something, in which case there is a 50-50 chance that a conservative upload will either kill the original anyway, or turn it into a zombie, or that the uploaded version will be soulless, whatever that means.
Another take on this is Tipler's, as used in "The Physics of Immortality", which is to assume that a simulation of the quantum state of your brain will be you (and hence we could be in an ancestor simulation, or wake up in one at any moment - if such things are possible, and are of high enough fidelity to reproduce simulated quantum states, and will actually exist somewhere, at some point in time - this is similar to a "Boltzman brain" argument, I suspect). I don't have enough knowledge of the relevant physics to comment on that one.
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My sense of things is that if it's not your identity who's is it then? Pattern identity sorts it out. If it looks like you, and it thinks like you, has your attitudes, opinions, belief's, prejudices, likes, dislikes, feels like you, feels like your own tongue in your own mouth...that's you.
How about this? MWI, if true, refutes the no-clonning conundrum.
> wrote: > How about this? MWI, if true, refutes the no-clonning conundrum. It was never a conundrum. -- Stathis Papaioannou -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Everything List" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to
For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.
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2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.
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--All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. (Roy Batty/Rutger Hauer)
2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.That's true, unless even in principle what gives rise to consciousness is not duplicable, accessible to us... (It's dubious, since our reality/nature did succeed to make it; at the very least for me). But if reality as it isn doesn't give us access to that (whatever we do, forever, because it is impossible like going faster than the speed of light under relativity, or going before the big bang as the time is beginning with it... and that indeed assumes a theory like computationalism is false), then it is a problem even phisophisically (that is if you still want to follow logic and still want what you're saying to be meaningfull)
I know.
so it isn't relevant if consciousness is due to something else, like an immaterial soul.
It is if perfect physical copying is not enough because it misses something.
Le 25 avr. 2015 01:25, "Quentin Anciaux" <allc...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>
>
> Le 25 avr. 2015 01:21, "Stathis Papaioannou" <stat...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> >
> >
> >
> > On Saturday, April 25, 2015, Quentin Anciaux <allc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> 2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.
> >>>
> >>> Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.
> >>>
> >>
> >> That's true, unless even in principle what gives rise to consciousness is not duplicable, accessible to us... (It's dubious, since our reality/nature did succeed to make it; at the very least for me). But if reality as it isn doesn't give us access to that (whatever we do, forever, because it is impossible like going faster than the speed of light under relativity, or going before the big bang as the time is beginning with it... and that indeed assumes a theory like computationalism is false), then it is a problem even phisophisically (that is if you still want to follow logic and still want what you're saying to be meaningfull)
> >
> >
> > The no clone theorem refers to physical copying,
>
> I know.
>
> so it isn't relevant if consciousness is due to something else, like an immaterial soul.
>
> It is if perfect physical copying is not enough because it misses something.
So to try to be clearer, if reality as it is does not give us access to what makes us conscious because whatever it is that makes us conscious is not in any of the physical properties, then even if you were able to make such a perfect physical copy, it would still not be you or even conscious because by definition that perfect copy does not have the conscious property which is not physical and cannot therefore be copied.
Quentin
Le 25 avr. 2015 01:25, "Quentin Anciaux" <allc...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>
>
> Le 25 avr. 2015 01:21, "Stathis Papaioannou" <stat...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> >
> >
> >
> > On Saturday, April 25, 2015, Quentin Anciaux <allc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> 2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.
> >>>
> >>> Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.
> >>>
> >>
> >> That's true, unless even in principle what gives rise to consciousness is not duplicable, accessible to us... (It's dubious, since our reality/nature did succeed to make it; at the very least for me). But if reality as it isn doesn't give us access to that (whatever we do, forever, because it is impossible like going faster than the speed of light under relativity, or going before the big bang as the time is beginning with it... and that indeed assumes a theory like computationalism is false), then it is a problem even phisophisically (that is if you still want to follow logic and still want what you're saying to be meaningfull)
> >
> >
> > The no clone theorem refers to physical copying,
>
> I know.
>
> so it isn't relevant if consciousness is due to something else, like an immaterial soul.
>
> It is if perfect physical copying is not enough because it misses something.So to try to be clearer, if reality as it is does not give us access to what makes us conscious because whatever it is that makes us conscious is not in any of the physical properties, then even if you were able to make such a perfect physical copy, it would still not be you or even conscious because by definition that perfect copy does not have the conscious property which is not physical and cannot therefore be copied.
Le 25 avr. 2015 01:25, "Quentin Anciaux" <allc...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>
>
> Le 25 avr. 2015 01:21, "Stathis Papaioannou" <stat...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> >
> >
> >
> > On Saturday, April 25, 2015, Quentin Anciaux <allc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> 2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.
> >>>
> >>> Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.
> >>>
> >>
> >> That's true, unless even in principle what gives rise to consciousness is not duplicable, accessible to us... (It's dubious, since our reality/nature did succeed to make it; at the very least for me). But if reality as it isn doesn't give us access to that (whatever we do, forever, because it is impossible like going faster than the speed of light under relativity, or going before the big bang as the time is beginning with it... and that indeed assumes a theory like computationalism is false), then it is a problem even phisophisically (that is if you still want to follow logic and still want what you're saying to be meaningfull)
> >
> >
> > The no clone theorem refers to physical copying,
>
> I know.
>
> so it isn't relevant if consciousness is due to something else, like an immaterial soul.
>
> It is if perfect physical copying is not enough because it misses something.So to try to be clearer, if reality as it is does not give us access to what makes us conscious because whatever it is that makes us conscious is not in any of the physical properties,
then even if you were able to make such a perfect physical copy, it would still not be you or even conscious because by definition that perfect copy does not have the conscious property which is not physical and cannot therefore be copied.
Le 25 avr. 2015 08:59, "meekerdb" <meek...@verizon.net> a écrit :
>
> On 4/24/2015 4:31 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>>
>> Le 25 avr. 2015 01:25, "Quentin Anciaux" <allc...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>> >
>> >
>> > Le 25 avr. 2015 01:21, "Stathis Papaioannou" <stat...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > On Saturday, April 25, 2015, Quentin Anciaux <allc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > >>
>> > >>
>> > >>
>> > >> 2015-04-24 23:07 GMT+02:00 Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>:
>> > >>>
>> > >>>
>> > >>>
>> > >>> On Friday, April 24, 2015, spudboy100 via Everything List <everyth...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>> > >>>>
>> > >>>> For some, its a conundrum, or in any case see it as a block to cloning, or a slam dunk into the trash bin of physics and philosophy. For me, no.
>> > >>>
>> > >>>
>> > >>> Philosophically there is no problem with the no clone theorem, since even if a perfect copy is needed to preserve consciousness the no clone theorem does not preclude perfect copying.
>> > >>>
>> > >>> Practically there is no problem with the no clone theorem since your brain undergoes gross change from moment to moment and you feel that you remain the same person.
>> > >>>
>> > >>
>> > >> That's true, unless even in principle what gives rise to consciousness is not duplicable, accessible to us... (It's dubious, since our reality/nature did succeed to make it; at the very least for me). But if reality as it isn doesn't give us access to that (whatever we do, forever, because it is impossible like going faster than the speed of light under relativity, or going before the big bang as the time is beginning with it... and that indeed assumes a theory like computationalism is false), then it is a problem even phisophisically (that is if you still want to follow logic and still want what you're saying to be meaningfull)
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > The no clone theorem refers to physical copying,
>> >
>> > I know.
>> >
>> > so it isn't relevant if consciousness is due to something else, like an immaterial soul.
>> >
>> > It is if perfect physical copying is not enough because it misses something.
>>
>> So to try to be clearer, if reality as it is does not give us access to what makes us conscious because whatever it is that makes us conscious is not in any of the physical properties,
>
>
> What does "access" mean in the above. I have access to my consciousness; I can reflect that I'm conscious, a kind of inner perception. What other "access" could there be? Do you mean the ability to make a copy or a conscious thing?
Access means the ability to copy the property that makes a conscious person conscious. If perfect physical copy cannot copy that even so it is a complete physical copy missing nothing physically speaking, because even that property is not comprised in the physical properties we have copied, by definition that copy would not be conscious. Again to be clear that's not what I believe, but it.'s an argument against that the in principle copy is always possible and meaningfull whatever reality is.
Quentin
>
>
>> then even if you were able to make such a perfect physical copy, it would still not be you or even conscious because by definition that perfect copy does not have the conscious property which is not physical and cannot therefore be copied.
>
>
> You seem to define "access" as an ability to physically reproduce, and then you say if we don't have access we can't physically reproduce consciousness. Which is then reduced to a tautology.
>
> Brent
>
> a destructive upload should be possible, and a conservative upload would give you a 50-50 chance of finding yourself uploaded.
> If there is something wrong with comp [...]
> The question is whether the you who was a biological entity experiences waking up as the uploaded version.
> Tipler claims
> that is guaranteed if you can duplicate - or, apparently, just simulate - the quantum state of your body
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 LizR <liz...@gmail.com> wrote:> a destructive upload should be possible, and a conservative upload would give you a 50-50 chance of finding yourself uploaded.Would give who a 50-50 chance of being uploaded?> If there is something wrong with comp [...]There is plenty wrong with Bruno's "comp",
but there is nothing wrong with computationalism.
John K Clark
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In the thread discussing comp the topic of whether uploading is possible came up. While tangentially related to comp, objections on the grounds of practical impossibility miss the point. But! The topic is still very interesting.
Is uploading possible?
If so, when will we have it?
What fidelity is necessary?
Will the upload still be you?
Would you sign up for a destructive upload? Conservative?
Feel free to toss any other questions into the mix.
For the record, I think uploading is possible, that destructive uploading will come way sooner,
I'm uncertain about fidelity, but I do think there could be a functional isomorphism that doesn't depend on on a structural one, i.e. 100 simplified neurons might be required to capture the behavior of one physical one. The substitution level i think is subcellular. I think uploading perserves identity and I might actually prefer a destructive upload, when I consider the disappointment of the me that wakes up still flesh and bone after a conservative upload.
On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 11:27:26AM +1000, Bruce Kellett wrote:
> LizR wrote:
> >
> >But there's no-cloning to consider - plus whether a simulated
> >quantum state is the same as a real one...
>
> No-cloning of an unknown quantum state is simply the statement that
> there is no unitary operator that will enable you to transfer the
> properties of one unknown quantum state to another.
>
> Simulating a quantum state might be another matter. Quantum states
> are generally described in terms of some basis in Hilbert space. The
> coefficients of the expansion in that basis are arbitrary complex
> numbers, subject to the usual normalization conventions for the
> state. If you want to simulate this state, you have to simulate
> these coefficients to arbitrary precision. This is not possible in
> finite time with a digital computer.
Not sure I follow you here. Arbitrary precision does not mean infinite
precision. If I want my calculation to be accurate to 300 digits, then
it can be calculated to 300 digits precision within finite time. If I
then want it to 600 digits, I can do that also, but very likely it
will 10^300 times as long.
In Everett's MWI the mulitple "worlds" are just projections of the one state-of-the-multivers onto different (approximately) orthogonal subspaces. There's no duplicating of states. And in any case the no-cloning theorem doesn't prohibit there being multiple copies of a state, it just prevents you from measuring an unknown state completely so that you know you have duplicated it. You can make copies of a state you know (i.e. prepare). And you could coincidentally make a copy of an unknown state - you just wouldn't be able to know it was a copy.
Brent
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> Is uploading possible?
> If so, when will we have it?
I think it goes without saying that the whole enterprise is mainly driven by the profit motive (although of course there have been significant injections from other areas, little things like the internet!) But the profit motive requires that people keep buying, and that requires that computers (in all their forms) continue to improve, since they don't tend to wear out THAT quickly.
On 4/27/2015 1:35 AM, LizR wrote:
I think it goes without saying that the whole enterprise is mainly driven by the profit motive (although of course there have been significant injections from other areas, little things like the internet!) But the profit motive requires that people keep buying, and that requires that computers (in all their forms) continue to improve, since they don't tend to wear out THAT quickly.
Then why can't I buy a laptop with as big a display (1920x1200) as my five year old HP.
I think personal computers have already gone past their peak of functionality and the "improvements" now are in the profit margin and the minds of the marketing department.
Brent
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2015-04-27 19:18 GMT+02:00 meekerdb <meek...@verizon.net>:
On 4/27/2015 1:35 AM, LizR wrote:
I think it goes without saying that the whole enterprise is mainly driven by the profit motive (although of course there have been significant injections from other areas, little things like the internet!) But the profit motive requires that people keep buying, and that requires that computers (in all their forms) continue to improve, since they don't tend to wear out THAT quickly.
Then why can't I buy a laptop with as big a display (1920x1200) as my five year old HP.
Maybe because you can buy laptop with better display, like 4k resolution...
And maybe because a lot of new things are done with mobile devices... there are phones that will have 4k display next year...
Brent
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I'm sorry, you were talking about resolution, not screen size.So what ? 4k screen are new in laptop (and anywhere else), but you can buy a 60" TV 4k screen, if you want... 17" 4k laptops are due to arrive this year, if they're not already there.
Le 28 avr. 2015 00:37, "meekerdb" <meek...@verizon.net> a écrit :
>
> On 4/27/2015 2:28 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> I'm sorry, you were talking about resolution, not screen size.
>> So what ? 4k screen are new in laptop (and anywhere else), but you can buy a 60" TV 4k screen, if you want... 17" 4k laptops are due to arrive this year, if they're not already there.
17" 4k will arrive this year, are you claiming it's false?
Bigger screen and It's not a laptop anymore. But if you like your old computer, keep it.
Quentin
>
>
> They're not. I've been looking to buy one since the first 4K laptops were announced. But doubling the resolution still doesn't make up for losing 17% of the screen area. The resolution was already as high as useful for a 17" screen.
>
> I can buy a 60" 4K TV, but I can't take it with me.
>
> Brent
>
Le 28 avr. 2015 00:37, "meekerdb" <meek...@verizon.net> a écrit :
>
> On 4/27/2015 2:28 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> I'm sorry, you were talking about resolution, not screen size.
>> So what ? 4k screen are new in laptop (and anywhere else), but you can buy a 60" TV 4k screen, if you want... 17" 4k laptops are due to arrive this year, if they're not already there.17" 4k will arrive this year, are you claiming it's false?
Bigger screen and It's not a laptop anymore. But if you like your old computer, keep it.
On 4/27/2015 10:20 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le 28 avr. 2015 00:37, "meekerdb" <meek...@verizon.net> a écrit :
>
> On 4/27/2015 2:28 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> I'm sorry, you were talking about resolution, not screen size.
>> So what ? 4k screen are new in laptop (and anywhere else), but you can buy a 60" TV 4k screen, if you want... 17" 4k laptops are due to arrive this year, if they're not already there.17" 4k will arrive this year, are you claiming it's false?
No, I'm just saying they aren't available; and I think the in terms of screen real estate, a 17" 3840x2160 is actually a step down in functionality from a 17" 1920x1200. Sure it's got more resolution, but my eye isn't good enough to benefit much from the higher resolution. But I will miss that loss of 17% of screen area. So returning to the original point I think that supports my case that laptops have peaked in functionality and now they're just adding bells and whistles.
Bigger screen and It's not a laptop anymore. But if you like your old computer, keep it.
I will keep it (in fact I've got two). But it's noticeably slow. That's why I was hoping for some real improvement.
Brent
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2015-04-28 7:59 GMT+02:00 meekerdb <meek...@verizon.net>:On 4/27/2015 10:20 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le 28 avr. 2015 00:37, "meekerdb" <meek...@verizon.net> a écrit :
>
> On 4/27/2015 2:28 PM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> I'm sorry, you were talking about resolution, not screen size.
>> So what ? 4k screen are new in laptop (and anywhere else), but you can buy a 60" TV 4k screen, if you want... 17" 4k laptops are due to arrive this year, if they're not already there.17" 4k will arrive this year, are you claiming it's false?
No, I'm just saying they aren't available; and I think the in terms of screen real estate, a 17" 3840x2160 is actually a step down in functionality from a 17" 1920x1200. Sure it's got more resolution, but my eye isn't good enough to benefit much from the higher resolution. But I will miss that loss of 17% of screen area. So returning to the original point I think that supports my case that laptops have peaked in functionality and now they're just adding bells and whistles.So anything even proof you're wrong support your case... well then yes... in dreamland.
Quentin
Bigger screen and It's not a laptop anymore. But if you like your old computer, keep it.
I will keep it (in fact I've got two). But it's noticeably slow. That's why I was hoping for some real improvement.
Brent
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--All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. (Roy Batty/Rutger Hauer)
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 10:59:33PM -0700, meekerdb wrote:
>
> No, I'm just saying they aren't available; and I think the in terms
> of screen real estate, a 17" 3840x2160 is actually a step down in
> functionality from a 17" 1920x1200. Sure it's got more resolution,
> but my eye isn't good enough to benefit much from the higher
> resolution. But I will miss that loss of 17% of screen area. So
> returning to the original point I think that supports my case that
> laptops have peaked in functionality and now they're just adding
> bells and whistles.
Manufacturers will be driven to approximate the 9:5 aspect ratio of
the movie screen, because for some reason, the number one use of a
laptop is as an expensive television set. Probably Pirate Bay has
something to do with this.
Unfortunately, the rest of us who'd prefer a much more square 5:4
aspect ratio will just have to put up.
Cheers
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2015-04-28 9:58 GMT+02:00 Russell Standish <li...@hpcoders.com.au>:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 10:59:33PM -0700, meekerdb wrote:
>
> No, I'm just saying they aren't available; and I think the in terms
> of screen real estate, a 17" 3840x2160 is actually a step down in
> functionality from a 17" 1920x1200. Sure it's got more resolution,
> but my eye isn't good enough to benefit much from the higher
> resolution. But I will miss that loss of 17% of screen area. So
> returning to the original point I think that supports my case that
> laptops have peaked in functionality and now they're just adding
> bells and whistles.
Manufacturers will be driven to approximate the 9:5 aspect ratio of
the movie screen, because for some reason, the number one use of a
laptop is as an expensive television set. Probably Pirate Bay has
something to do with this.
Unfortunately, the rest of us who'd prefer a much more square 5:4
aspect ratio will just have to put up.
In the end what he misses is the 16:10 or 5:4 aspect ratio, not the screen size per se or resolution. It's true that now, every screens are 16:9.
I suppose there aren't much demand for it, or the demand is not as high as the supplemental cost to manufacture them...
But I can't agree that because of that you can say no innovations are done... that's ignoring everything else that make up a computer... a computer is not a screen... personnaly I have three displays on my PC (two external and the laptop one), and I find it more important and useful than a single 16:10/5:4 screen.