William, you are purposedly misquoting me. I did not say "it's not  
possible", I said "there is no proof that it's possible". Logically  
these are two very different statements, aren't they? But I have noted  
that in discussions you always assume that the burden of the proof is  
on the other. You keep making statements about things we don't know  
and try to pass it as granted that it is acquired knowledge, while  
it's no more than vague speculation about something, maybe possible,  
very far in the future and difficult to define exactly.

As for the exact duplication of brains it could not even feasible in  
principle; you know, not everything you may vaguely think of is  
actually possible; this happens in physics. If we could define exactly  
what duplication means then there could be some start of a sound  
discussion, but it seems to me that we are very far even from that.  
Are you really prepared to discuss the intricacies and subtleties of  
information theory?

Daniel


[email protected] wrote:

> You've said twice that this cannot be done but not once have  
> demonstrated any reason why except that you protest against it. As  
> for my claim, I don't have to actually demonstrate it in reality  
> because it's only theoretical - plus the technology does not exist  
> for me to show it. Are you also claiming that Grahams Number doesn't  
> exist because it cannot be written down completely? If your  
> statements are correct, then most of modern Math cannot exist  
> because it cannot be shown in physical reality.
>
> Why WOULDN'T it be possible? Are you suggesting, again, that there  
> is some magic emergent property within a Strad that we would be  
> unable to measure?
>
> To me that isn't very scientific.

and also wrote

> It's medical science and it's reality. Memories are not some magical  
> emergent property. They must physically exist somewhere, and they  
> are stored in the brain:
>
> http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-memory-trace
>
> Where else would they exist? Some higher dimension that we could  
> never measure? Some sort of magic?
>
> It's not fundamentalist at all to say what I've said, since there is  
> basis for this in medical science.
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