(The thing with the duplicate Riker? I chalk that up to sloppy writing, nothing more.)
I would say that if a body is deconstructed and turned into an energy stream, then the person has technically died - unless the individual consciousness is somehow retained and maintained through the entire process.
IIRC Scotty refused to ever use a transporter. :P
Some TOS person on TNG said they never used the transporter...
Encounter at Farpoint said:MCCOY: Have you got some reason you want my atoms scattered all over space, boy?
DATA: No sir. But at your age, sir, I thought you shouldn't have to put up with the time and trouble of a shuttlecraft.
Wouldn't he ever beam down on away missions?
I think Dr. Pulaski also had an aversion to using the transporter.
Like the old saw about the irrresistable force meeting the immovable object, this is strictly a matter of definition. If, for instance, you define as "you" any entity that remembers your memories, thinks your thoughts, and feels your feelings, than a transported duplicate is "you". (Well, as much you as you are, at any rate.) If, on the other hand, you define "you" as the you you are, accept no substitutes, then your answer may differ.
My concern is would my consciousness.... me, would I still exist? Or not.... because if that question can't be answered then yah... I'll stick to the shuttles tyvm
(The thing with the duplicate Riker? I chalk that up to sloppy writing, nothing more.)
How about Kirk in The Enemy Within?
But it wouldn't be impossible to determine if the original physical form was being delivered, or if the original was knowing being destroyed with a copy being created to the destination.If technology to build a functioning transporter were ever to exist, I think it might be damn near impossible to definitively prove what happens to the conscious mind in a transporter stream.
No, in Spock Must Die the intent was that Spock would be scan, a deliberate copy would be sent to a distant planet, investigate the situation, return to the transporter chamber to report, and then (iirc) purposely be destroyed.This debate was at the heart of Spock Must Die
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