Thanks for the spoilerMeh. I'd like to have Mockingbird back, but I couldn't care less about Hunter.
Thanks for the spoilerMeh. I'd like to have Mockingbird back, but I couldn't care less about Hunter.
Well, that's where you get into the philosophical question of whether a difference that makes no difference is a difference or not. It's much the same as the philosophical question of whether someone sent through a teleporter is the same person at the other end.
And even if the emulation is still understood to be a distinct individual, that doesn't mean they aren't a sentient being and thus deserving of the right to live. Then it's more like a transporter duplicate -- not you, but still a person. In such a situation, calling one "real" and the other not is arbitrary.
Well, I put "real" in quotes to emphasize that it was an arbitrary use of the term — not to indicate that one is more real than the other (which may be true, as a separate argument), but just to indicate which version of the character we're talking about.No, it wouldn't be arbitrary at all. There's something very unambiguous meant by "real" Agnes and "real" Radcliffe. What's in the Framework is not interchangeable with what's in the real world.
But even if they are, the definitions of life and death for them are unlikely to be the same as ours. Not if "life" can be achieved by flipping a switch and "death" can be reversed by re-spawning. So far we've seen nothing to indicate otherwise.
Uh, I'm not sure how that fits with what I wrote.
Hmm, interesting possibility. Still, I suspect that if the show explains it at all, it'll just be that death = deletion and that re-spawning isn't possible. Obviously Simmons is an exception, but in her case they were able to re-download the source code.![]()
2008. Same year as the first Iron Man movie.
Well, that's the year the movie came out, but the online references that I can find seem to date its events to either 2009 or 2010, presumably because of references in the later films.
Not if there was unbroken continuity. Then it was a migration of her consciousness, which would make Framework Agnes the same person as Meatworld Agnes.Uh, it was a copy before. We wouldn't be calling it an "emulation" if it was understood to be the real thing. The "real" Agnes died of cancer and the "real" Radcliffe bled out.
Bullshit.Not if there was unbroken continuity. Then it was a migration of her consciousness, which would make Framework Agnes the same person as Meatworld Agnes.
Framework Agnes is a copy.
The SHIELD agents in the framework are not copies. They are avatars interlinked with the original brains.
There is a difference.
The "people" in the Framework do NOT exist. They are a simulation, albeit a very sophisticated one. They only exist in the computer(s) that run the Framework. They are not at all like Tom Riker. That was a person (accident) that lives in the real world. The Framework people do not.
Without a way to experimentally test such a hypothesis, and evidently there is no such way, that hypothesis is unscientific, regardless of how many scientists might argue for it. And I guess you missed my post, or are simply ignoring it, on how it's impossible for a supercomputer capable of modeling the real universe with perfect fidelity to even exist in our universe.Indeed, some scientists argue it's more probable than not that our universe is a computer simulation. (It's a statistical argument: If a sufficiently advanced supercomputer could model multiple entire universes, and a given universe can contain a vast number of supercomputers, then it follows that simulated universes would overwhelmingly outnumber physical universes, thus the odds are much greater that our universe is in the former category.)
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