On Wed, 9 Sep 2020 at 11:53, Bruce Kellett <bhkellet...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Wed, Sep 9, 2020 at 11:39 AM 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List <
> everything-list@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>
>> On 9/8/2020 6:14 PM, smitra wrote:
>> > On 09-09-2020 02:16, Bruce Kellett wrote:
>>
>> >> I don't find that answer convincing, because of the implicit dualist
>> >> assumption. A perfectly reasonable answer to the question asked the
>> >> night before duplication is: "I won't be in a room tomorrow morning,
>> >> because when I am duplicated with 100 continuers, I cease to exist and
>> >> each of the continuers becomes a new, separate person. This is because
>> >> there is a tie among the continuers, with no closest continuer. In
>> >> that situation, the original ceases, and the continuers are separate
>> >> persons."
>> >>
>> >> Now you might not like this answer, but it is perfectly coherent and
>> >> rational. It has the great advantage that it avoids the stench of
>> >> dualism that hangs over your theory.
>> >>
>> >> Bruce
>> >>
>> >
>> > The tie will be broken by small random fluctuations in the physical
>> > states of the copies.
>>
>> Dualism would imply that one and only one of the duplicates has your
>> soul and is "you".  I see no problem is just saying they are Bruce
>> Kellet-1, Bruce Kellet-2,... Bruce Kellet-100.  They all remember the
>> bet, and assuming their stake is duplicated too, they each either get
>> $100 or lose $25.  The existence of more than one Bruce Kellet certainly
>> creates problems in law and language.  But law and language are invented
>> to deal with reality, not define it.
>>
>
>
> You are right about what dualism implies. So if you ask the question of
> the person the night before duplication, it has no answer unless you assume
> dualism. I think you are right about multiple BKs: BK1, BK2,... and so on.
> These are different persons who share some memories with the BK of the
> night before. Closest continuer theory works well in these duplication
> scenarios, despite the fact that people on this list seem averse to that
> theory for some undefined reason.
>

You could say that any suggestion that one of the BK's is a continuation of
the original, even when there is only one BK extant at any time, implies
dualism.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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