The chances of getting cancer would skyrocket, using the transporter ... surely. All of that ... that radiation can't be doing a body good! I'd never trust it - out of my sight ... or in it!
In one case, that of biological aging, Phil has worked as a continuous system (cells being replaced in a continuously functioning system, just as the "working" ship of Theseus continues to function as a system as one plank is replaced at a time) over time. In another case, that of teleportation, there is a discontinuity. You cease to exist, however briefly, as a system. Your matter is converted into energy (all the planks shattered into sawdust) and then rearranged in a different space. A system, indistinguishably similar to your own, appears in a different space.
Consider that, by your logic, one might murder you in five minutes without harming you. This would NOT do you (present you, pre-five-minutes-from-now-you) any harm. Or perhaps let's make it five days or five years. I think you would object that future you is still you - at least in any case where this was a real-world situation removed from the cozy confines of philosophical reasoning.
The Ship of Theseus line of reasoning pushes us to accept a purely functionalist reading of identity. Under this view, we would view "you" as a sort of computer program or computer file like an MP3. So long as the information is conserved and reinstantiated in a functioning system, there is no loss.
If the ship were remade with every blemish in every board and every idiosyncrasy in functioning; e.g. if board 72-x-31 still squeaks a certain way when Lt. Doofus steps on it, then it is the same ship, even if it was blown up into sawdust and reconstructed. This is the magic we ascribe to the transporter: exact reconstruction.
Provenance arguably matters in the identity of paintings in much the same way that it matters in the identity of people. That is, we are not all merely like computer files in being infinitely iterable, but rather unique in that there is only one person who will ever have your "inside view" - your qualia. You are one of a kind. You may not be particularly interesting or valuable, but you are unique in that you will be the only one of you that will ever exist, regardless of any copy that might be made.
At the very least, we would want to settle these sorts of issues before we steamed ahead under a functionalist account of identity.
Or a visiting ambassador, like the first Trill we saw, he insisted that the transporter process would "kill him."OK, then it could have been a visiting scientist of the week.
If you truly believe that the transporter process create a soulless golum, how would the copy that you permitted to be created feel about themselves?I might allow for a replicator transporter to make a copy of me somewhere else. Perhaps my copy would materialize on a starship and observe great adventures.
Yes, I'd use them. I have no time for "metaphysical" mumbo-jumbo. Just give me cool science.
I don't recall YARN saying they would have NO soul, only that they wouldn't have the soul of the original. "Soul" being an emergent property, presumably they would have their own soul. I suffer no psychological problems from the idea that I do not have my predecessors' souls (those of my parents): I have my own. So why would Thomas Riker be worried about not having one?If you truly believe that the transporter process create a soulless golum, how would the copy that you permitted to be created feel about themselves?I might allow for a replicator transporter to make a copy of me somewhere else. Perhaps my copy would materialize on a starship and observe great adventures.
They would possess all of your personal beliefs, would they subsequent to their own creation experience psychological problems, perhaps even a eventual breakdown?
Using a transporter: nay. To go by what we see on the shows, the chances are too high that I'll wind up split up between two bodies, stuck dealing with an evil twin, get randomly recombined with somebody else, get beamed into a wacky alternate universe or just straight up die horribly and explode.
If you truly believe that the transporter process create a soulless golum, how would the copy that you permitted to be created feel about themselves?
They would possess all of your personal beliefs, would they subsequent to their own creation experience psychological problems, perhaps even a eventual breakdown?
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I don't recall YARN saying they would have NO soul, only that they wouldn't have the soul of the original. "Soul" being an emergent property, presumably they would have their own soul. I suffer no psychological problems from the idea that I do not have my predecessors' souls (those of my parents): I have my own. So why would Thomas Riker be worried about not having one?If you truly believe that the transporter process create a soulless golum, how would the copy that you permitted to be created feel about themselves?I might allow for a replicator transporter to make a copy of me somewhere else. Perhaps my copy would materialize on a starship and observe great adventures.
They would possess all of your personal beliefs, would they subsequent to their own creation experience psychological problems, perhaps even a eventual breakdown?
If you truly believe that the transporter process create a soulless golum, how would the copy that you permitted to be created feel about themselves?
They would possess all of your personal beliefs, would they subsequent to their own creation experience psychological problems, perhaps even a eventual breakdown?
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I think it more being converted into a energy state, than being destroyed and remade seconds later, you in some fashion remain a life form the entire time.Simply because I even if you could get around the horrendous energy expenditure involved in creating and destroying matter
Interesting question, but probably not unless it was a life or death situation. Simply because I even if you could get around the horrendous energy expenditure involved in creating and destroying matter (E=mc^2) (energy equals mass times the speed of light squared) could be surmounted, I firmly believe the uncertainty principle would put a stop to any transporting (it's impossible to know both the location and the momentum of a subatomic particle at the same time, so it goes without saying that they can't be replicated exactly).
But even if some weird physics might make transporters possible, I don't think I'd voluntarily use them, simply because I can't trust technology that far.
^ Yep. In ST II, Kirk and Saavik carry on a conversation while being transported. And we see the process, uninterrupted, from Barclay's point of view in TNG ("Realm of Fear").
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