On 23 Feb 2014, at 06:21, LizR wrote:

On 23 February 2014 17:40, meekerdb <meeke...@verizon.net> wrote:
On 2/22/2014 5:49 PM, David Nyman wrote:
No, I don't think that follows. The indefinite continuation of consciousness is directly entailed by CTM. In fact it is equivalent to the continuing existence of the sensible world (i.e. per comp, the world is what is observed). Hence any observer can expect to remain centred in the circle of observation, come what may, to speak rather loosely. There is a transcendent expectation of a definite continuation (aka no cul-de-sac). This expectation is relativised only secondarily in terms of the specifics of some particular continuation.

So does your consciousness continue indefinitely into the past?

This would imply there is no initial state of mind - assumed digital, I assume? - or that every possible mental state has a precursor. Does computational theory assume this, or can a mind start from a blank state?

It might start from a state of consciousness which is beyond time. Let us say the "blank state of the universal "virgin" (non programmed) machine.

The []p & <>t modality makes the "world" into a non-cul-de-sac world, but does not imply an infinite "past", or previous computational history per se, although this is not entirely excluded for the physics in comp.




Or given that consciousness is not the contents of consciousness, does this just imply amensia about previous lives? (And maybe that "I am he as you are he as he is me", etc).

In some sense, perhaps. That can be related somehow.

Bruno



http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/



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