Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
July 21, 2025, 12:24:28 PM

Login with username, password and session length

Search:     Advanced search
we're back, baby
*
Home Help Search Login Register
f13.net  |  f13.net General Forums  |  General Discussion  |  Serious Business  |  Topic: Magnetic Morality 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Pages: 1 [2] Go Down Print
Author Topic: Magnetic Morality  (Read 11511 times)
Cyrrex
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10603


Reply #35 on: April 01, 2010, 09:24:26 AM

Regardless, if the ability is there to produce an exact copy, then it can be done multiple times.  All you end up with is a series of identical twins whose splits happen at the moment of production rather than in the womb.  They all think they're the original you, but time and differing experiences will make them Youn, Youn+1, ...Youn+m.
What if you can merge them back? :) I'd be happy to fork off my conciousness a few dozen times and get some work done. David Brin's Kiln People was all about that, and it's a common theme in Stross' Accelerando and Glasshouse.

It's hard to die when you have hot copies of yourself scattered around, tend to back yourself up regularly, and whatnot.

As I said before, I'm not really sure the same "me" wakes up each morning as went to bed. I'm running on the same hardware, but chunks of my software got rebooted.

The only question left remaining is whether you are technically two-boxing yourself, or if one of you is a pirated copy?

"...maybe if you cleaned the piss out of the sunny d bottles under your desks and returned em, you could upgrade you vid cards, fucken lusers.." - Grunk
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #36 on: April 01, 2010, 09:35:28 AM

The only question left remaining is whether you are technically two-boxing yourself, or if one of you is a pirated copy?
Also an issue Brin brings up in Kiln People. Synopsis of the concept: People can imprint copies of the conciousness on pseudo-clones (imagine them as golems, always identifiable as such, but can be shaped like anything. Bus Drivers clone their conciousness into a huge Brontosaurus like bus, that takes copies/dittos off to work. Real people stay home and party, while their clones do all the chores and work.). You can merge them back into you at the end of the day, or leave them off.

Clones can be specialized, even improved -- to the point where your copy might be a heck of a lot better able to grasp abstract math, for instance. They only have enough 'gas' for like a day or two, and can't be refueled. They're designed to melt down and be recycled.

Anyways, a bit of a side story involves a famous Dominatrix whose business was, basically, selling clones of herself. Customer would buy one, have it shipped to them, turn it on, get a nice 24 hours with a skilled Dominatrix. Except someone stole one of her clones, and was making hordes of cheap copies of the copy.

I know Glasshouse deals with something similar -- travelling between star systems is done through wormholes, where you're broken down to a data-stream, heavily encrypted, and sent. It makes identify verification a bit of a bitch, especially since if you can make absolute digital copies, you can modify them. Or hack them.
Cyrrex
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10603


Reply #37 on: April 01, 2010, 09:46:42 AM

So if you merge it back into yourself, do its experiences and knowledge become yours?

"...maybe if you cleaned the piss out of the sunny d bottles under your desks and returned em, you could upgrade you vid cards, fucken lusers.." - Grunk
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #38 on: April 01, 2010, 09:57:17 AM

So if you merge it back into yourself, do its experiences and knowledge become yours?
Yep. In Kiln People, people mostly did it with the "fun" ones (shit like, say, gladiator clones they created and played the equivilant of Battlebots with), clones that went to parties, and clones that went to work -- if they did knowledge work, where cumulative experience mattered, and not repititive stuff.

If you went crazy enough with it -- like spawning off dozens of clones a day and merging them back in at night, and doing it for decades, you'd sort of overload your brain with information.

In Accelerando, the process a bit different. People would -- closer to the end of Singularity, not at the beginning -- fork off versions of themselves (from full-up versions to lightweight ones) to run virtually, which they'd use to do everything from consider problems to effectively seeing if you and the chick you just met had chemistry, as you'd both fork off 'ghosts' (virtual selves) who'd virtually date, virtually fuck, and report back a thumbs up or down, and merge back in.

However, real world divergence -- copies of yourself running around, much older copies of you being woken up by yourself and others -- was handled differently. Made shit complicated when you could find out you were declared dead, or that "you" were now considered a derivative work of yourself.

By the end, they'd take kids who had all the implants and hardware, fork their conciousness, let it grow up, learn, and age into about the 20s or so virtually, then socket it back in to be a virtual babysitter there to keep an eye on the kid and hit panic buttons if something weird happened. Under, I suppose, the theory that the person who knows BEST what to do with a 4 year old is, you know, himself. Just 20 years older.
Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848


Reply #39 on: April 01, 2010, 10:37:53 AM

How is the 'copy' merged?  If it's putting you on a slab and tweaking a few neurons, sure.  If you vaporize both and reconstruct an average of the two then it's just a third slightly altered copy.  You only exists with continuity.

Any exact or near copies will think they're you, why not since they're the same state, but aren't.  Whomever was the original was vaporized.  It's not the same person, regardless of how much the copies want to believe they are.  They think they are since they'll believe they were continuous, but they weren't.

It's absolutely no different than cloning a hard disk across several identical builds.  They'll perform the same, but they are not the original.

If your computer was sentient, would it be okay to make a copy of it, shut it off, then restore it to a new platform?  Is BobAI still really BobAI or is it really BobAI^2?  B^2 might not care, but B0 certainly would.

Hahahaha!  I'm really good at this!
Samwise
Moderator
Posts: 19324

sentient yeast infection


WWW
Reply #40 on: April 01, 2010, 10:40:15 AM

One aspect of The Butterfly Effect (yes, the Ashton movie) I really liked was the sudden "merging" of two sets of memories every time he changed the past, so that on returning to the present he remembered both the "original" timeline and all of the different experiences he'd had in the "new" timeline after the point in his life he had changed.  The ultimate consequence of time travel (SPOILER ALERT) aside from screwing yourself over with unintended consequences was overloading your brain with all those different lifetimes and going nuts.
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #41 on: April 01, 2010, 12:01:56 PM

How is the 'copy' merged?  If it's putting you on a slab and tweaking a few neurons, sure.  If you vaporize both and reconstruct an average of the two then it's just a third slightly altered copy.  You only exists with continuity.

Any exact or near copies will think they're you, why not since they're the same state, but aren't.  Whomever was the original was vaporized.  It's not the same person, regardless of how much the copies want to believe they are.  They think they are since they'll believe they were continuous, but they weren't.

It's absolutely no different than cloning a hard disk across several identical builds.  They'll perform the same, but they are not the original.

If your computer was sentient, would it be okay to make a copy of it, shut it off, then restore it to a new platform?  Is BobAI still really BobAI or is it really BobAI^2?  B^2 might not care, but B0 certainly would.
With Kiln People, it was basically just accumulating a day's worth of memories. Just, you know, all at once. Accelerando had much the same thing, with forked ghosts. THey'd either merge differing experiences back into the main process, merge the two selves creating a slightly different 'new' self, or leave the information as a lump for the main process to assimilate like an ongoing experience.

If you only exist with continuity, I stopped existing the night I had my first seizure. I've got missing time, I've been reliably informed that the post-seizure state is fucking creepy (very obvious 'lights are on, no one's home') and my parents said it was surreal watching my brain reboot back up. About the only part of me that was continuous was the bit that controls my heartrate and breathing.

Typically, post-seizure, I don't remember anything from the 30 to 45 minutes after physically awakening, but before my brain's back online. I've even, I've been told, gotten up and wandered around in the latter stages -- albeit drunkenly and without purpose. I generally have swiss-cheesed memories of the hours preceding my going to bed (mine occur, and rarely, only during sleep). It normally takes a day or two before I can even remember what I had done at ALL the day before, which is why I generally wake up confused and wondering what day it is, and I've never gotten back the last bits before sleep. I've never remembered going to bed the night before, although my parents (and later my wife) did.

To me, I just..wake up. Suddenly and totally. I'm talking like adreneline straight to the heart wake up. One instant "nada", next instant total (if confused) conciousness. I've woken up to find myself in a different room (post seizure wanderings), on the floor (fell off the bed), and at least twice with EMT's leaning over me (first time I had one, and then the time I apparently went right out of the bed whanging my head on the way down). I've been told I even gave (incorrectly) my SSN to the EMTs and answered questions with almost sensical responses.

So I'm not too concerned with altering my state of conciousness by, say, merging a different set of memories with mine. I alter it in that way every day, as I process input, and any continuity stuff gets set aside by the big giant lurching gaps I have from seizures, and the smaller, gentler ones from sleep or anesthesia. Combine them both -- take me, copy me, destroy me, recreate me elsewhere -- that's a little more iffy. I have no experience with that. If, however, conciousness turns out to be a process or whatever that is no more truly 'interrupted' by that than sleep, or head injuries, or whatever...I'd stop caring.

In Accelerando-verse, I wouldn't mind forking off virtual selves and reabsorbing them. I'd be a little more worried about, say, stored copies of me waking up -- but since I'd probably be dead and they'd be backups, kinda moot.
Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848


Reply #42 on: April 01, 2010, 03:02:36 PM

I'm not talking about a Sci-Fi book though, I'm talking about how it would work if we had the technology to do this.  It's not you.

And by continuity I don't just mean moments of consciousness.  While many of the molecules in my body aren't the same as  ten years ago, there is a continuity from moment to moment.  There are brain cycles which happen in our sleep.  I've been under anesthesia, even had that wonderful drug which makes you completely unable to remember events even though you're away prior to surgery (the name slips my memory Grin).  It's still you which wakes up.  Your body and mind have not been replaced.

Seizures might be considered a reboot, but it's still the same hardware and software running the show.  It is not the same thing as creating another person wholesale that happens to be identical.  They are another being, regardless of who thinks they are whom.  They may both have the same claim to the Bob identity at that point, but there is nothing mystical linking the two together.  One doesn't have any more moral right to decide what happens to the other than I do with you.

Now your mental makeup might be quite fine with doing things such as wiping one another out to generate a new copy, but that doesn't magically make you anything but clones who rationalize that because you think alike you're the same person.

What you are doing that is declaring that the data which constitutes Morat is the person, and not the physical being.  Lantyssa Prime disagrees and won't be stepping on that deconstructor.  (And she feels sorry for the Lantyssa Clones which are descended from her when she finally relents.  But hey, not her problem anymore.)

Hahahaha!  I'm really good at this!
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #43 on: April 02, 2010, 08:28:15 AM

What you are doing that is declaring that the data which constitutes Morat is the person, and not the physical being.  Lantyssa Prime disagrees and won't be stepping on that deconstructor.  (And she feels sorry for the Lantyssa Clones which are descended from her when she finally relents.  But hey, not her problem anymore.)
I don't think we really grasp the mechanisms of conciousness well enough to say that "Me" is either the data that comprises me, or something else. Am I the software? The interactions between software and specific, unique, hardware? Or something closer to a vector -- the culmination of a lifelong process? Or more like a wave, altering and moving but not collapsing until death?

I suspect, long before we're scanning people into computers or transporters, that we'll have a better idea of it. Mostly, I would imagine, from people dying who figure "what the hell" and go first, and give us some valuable data in the process. And possibly by uploading lobsters.
Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848


Reply #44 on: April 02, 2010, 09:43:54 AM

We have plenty of data.  Identical twins are not the same person.

Hahahaha!  I'm really good at this!
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #45 on: April 02, 2010, 09:56:41 AM

We have plenty of data.  Identical twins are not the same person.
Identical twins aren't even identical. Not even at birth. They're not even clones, much less forked versions of the same conciousness.

And identical twins say nothing about the nature of conciousness, of personality, of what makes a person "them". They run on similar, but not identical, hardware -- hardware that diverges more each day, and their software processes were never merged -- their software (and heck, their underlying hardware) developed long after they split apart, and developed differently. (Being an identical twin makes you identical on the rough scale, but not the fine -- the way genes work and activate, the way growth and development occurs, you get physical differences from the get go.

Even on the rough "I can eyeball it" stage -- how do you think parents and close friends tell them apart? Freckles that don't match, minor changes in how hair behaves, slight differences in eye color.....

Compared to, say, a cell-by-cell, molecule-by-molecule, exact copy of a person --- twins might as well be different species, theyr'e so far apart.
LK
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4268


Reply #46 on: April 02, 2010, 12:58:19 PM

My identical twin is gay.

I am not.

Discuss.

"Then there's the double-barreled shotgun from Doom 2 - no-one within your entire household could be of any doubt that it's been fired because it sounds like God slamming a door on his fingers." - Yahtzee Croshaw
NowhereMan
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7353


Reply #47 on: April 02, 2010, 01:02:59 PM

One of you has issues awesome, for real

"Look at my car. Do you think that was bought with the earnest love of geeks?" - HaemishM
Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848


Reply #48 on: April 02, 2010, 08:24:08 PM

Compared to, say, a cell-by-cell, molecule-by-molecule, exact copy of a person --- twins might as well be different species, theyr'e so far apart.
So if there are five exactly identical copies of you running around, is it murder if I only kill four?

Hahahaha!  I'm really good at this!
Musashi
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1692


Reply #49 on: April 02, 2010, 09:47:52 PM

Yes!  Yes!  Go, thread go!  Into murky waters!

AKA Gyoza
Sheepherder
Terracotta Army
Posts: 5192


Reply #50 on: April 03, 2010, 03:31:57 AM

So if there are five exactly identical copies of you running around, is it murder if I only kill four?
The Hitchhiker is strong in this one.

It's like the creature that Dent has killed dozens of times through the wonder of reincarnation and time traveling.
« Last Edit: April 03, 2010, 03:36:21 AM by Sheepherder »
Morat20
Terracotta Army
Posts: 18529


Reply #51 on: April 03, 2010, 08:10:52 AM

Compared to, say, a cell-by-cell, molecule-by-molecule, exact copy of a person --- twins might as well be different species, theyr'e so far apart.
So if there are five exactly identical copies of you running around, is it murder if I only kill four?
It depends entirely on how it works. Frankly, once you've got copies around like that, the law is in for some serious changes.

Fully killing someone would be a bit more difficult, at least. If the copies are simply there to do jobs then merge or not merge back in at the end of the day, per the owner's whims --- destruction of property is about as far as it goes.
Righ
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6542

Teaching the world Google-fu one broken dream at a time.


Reply #52 on: April 03, 2010, 09:59:37 AM

Compared to, say, a cell-by-cell, molecule-by-molecule, exact copy of a person --- twins might as well be different species, theyr'e so far apart.
So if there are five exactly identical copies of you running around, is it murder if I only kill four?

Greetings citizen! The benevolent computer has generously determined that the asking of such questions is above your security clearance. Now proceed to the food vats and begin your work.

The camera adds a thousand barrels. - Steven Colbert
bhodi
Moderator
Posts: 6817

No lie.


Reply #53 on: April 03, 2010, 03:28:00 PM

But before you do, stop by R&D - they've been asking for a few troubleshooters to test some new inventions.
Pages: 1 [2] Go Up Print 
f13.net  |  f13.net General Forums  |  General Discussion  |  Serious Business  |  Topic: Magnetic Morality  
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.10 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC