X-Message-Number: 32511 From: Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2010 11:49:48 EDT Subject: identity & value I don't know why my format is coming through so distorted, with gaps and blurs. Jordan asks, "Why do you deny that the exact copy constructed out of organic molecules would not have the same value and importance as the original? " Value to whom? If you are talking about factual feelings of importance--how a doomed original would really feel--then certainly many people would not be consoled by survival of a copy, although some would, or say or think they would. If I were told that I would be "beamed up," even if I believed the copying could be done correctly, I would consider it a death sentence. You apparently would not. How would you feel if you knew or guessed that in the far future, quite by chance, in a far galaxy a copy of you would develop? Would that console you? By the way, it is easy to prove that no accurate simulation of a person will be possible in the foreseeable future. This is simply because the laws of physics are not accurately or completely known, and the simulation necessarily uses the rules of physics, and the constants of physics, as currently estimated by the programmer. Interpretations of quantum mechanics differ wildly. One line of work, string or brane or M theory, uses extra dimensions and many parameters, and some theorists think there are different laws in different parts of the multiverse, or that laws and constants may change over time. Whether the competing theories differ in important ways we don't yet know but it is hard to see how they could not. Robert Ettinger Content-Type: text/html; charset="US-ASCII" [ AUTOMATICALLY SKIPPING HTML ENCODING! ] Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=32511