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Old 04-15-2003, 05:55 PM   #101
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Quote:
Originally posted by Clutch
Was this or was this not my point?
You said, "Indeed, it seems rather clear that you're talking about his J.Phil paper, "Manifest Kinds".

Oops. I took "J.Phil" to be a name and "his" to be a typo. My mistake. Though now J. Phil must mean Journal of Philosophy I guess, sorry not familiar with that.

Quote:
What's the problem supposed to be? There would, for a (very short, though the duration is irrelevant) time be two psychologically exactly similar but numerically (and physically!) distinct agents. Diachronically there's no obvious problem. As Parfit says, I survive as both. (Being, of course, identical to neither.) Synchronically, there's no obvious problem either. What does "I" refer to? Whoever says it, just like always.
Do you actually, think that cloning will make "you" immortal? That it will prolong "your" "I" statements? Besides you cannot say "I" survive in both. There is no "I" in this case. Clearly, the fact that you say both could exist causes serious problems. Your clone will claim to be the continuation of you, but you know that he is the clone and you are the actual person who continues the original PC.
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Old 04-15-2003, 06:03 PM   #102
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Quote:
Originally posted by mnkbdky


Anyway, this thesis is realy nothing radical. In fact, it is, I think, quiet uncontroversial.
However, since I believe numerical identity is the only way for us to have persons over
time, and clearly the dualist has shown that this is a possible way, I think it is up to the
materialist to offer a views of how identity could be maintained in the abscence of
numerical identity.

I don't believe that it is controversial, Descartes is one of my favorite philosophers to read, I just believe that dualism is wrong.

I've offered an alternate way the identity can be maintained thru time, but you haven't responded to it. Furthermore, you engage in your own "hand waving" regaring the problems of dualism.

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Many people have been unsatisfied with the answer "it just does." And at first glance that
answer does seem to avoid the question. The whole point is, however, that that is a
question that cannot possible be answered--at least not be any human. I have said
earlier it is like asking, "Why or how does the prick of a pin cause pain instead of
pleasure?" One might answer, "because it causes a C-fiber to fire." Then the question
become, "Why how does it do that?" "Why doesn't cause something else to fire." The only
answer you can give to such question is that it just does. These are brute facts.
It is a false analogy to compare your answer to how the soul exerts causitive influence over the body to respones of the body to stimuli. One is speculative philosophy, the other is empirical science.

Also, you have stated that the soul is immaterial. Thus the in no place does the soul exist. Or to say another way, for all x, there is no x such that the soul exists there. Therefore, the soul exists nowhere.
Ax(~Sx)<=>~ExSx
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Old 04-15-2003, 06:16 PM   #103
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Quote:
Originally posted by ex-xian

I've offered an alternate way the identity can be maintained thru time, but you haven't responded to it. Furthermore, you engage in your own "hand waving" regaring the problems of dualism.
I am sorry I don't remember yours, could you please cut and paste it again.

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It is a false analogy to compare your answer to how the soul exerts causitive influence over the body to respones of the body to stimuli. One is speculative philosophy, the other is empirical science.
How is it emperical science? Yes, we can see that the pin prick causes pain, but how is the question "Why does it do this and not something else?", part of science. There is nothing that I no of that can emperically answer that question, nor is there any philosophical answer either.

Quote:
Also, you have stated that the soul is immaterial. Thus the in no place does the soul exist. Or to say another way, for all x, there is no x such that the soul exists there. Therefore, the soul exists nowhere.
Ax(~Sx)<=>~ExSx [/B]
I'll deal with that latter, but for nowI suggest you read my response again.
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Old 04-15-2003, 06:32 PM   #104
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Do you actually, think that cloning will make "you" immortal?
Immortal? No. Heat death of the universe and all. But as you describe the process, yes, in the shorter term being mnk-cloned is a way of being pretty much as diachronically unified as normal experience is.
Quote:
Besides you cannot say "I" survive in both. There is no "I" in this case.
Did the argument happen to fast for me, there?. It looked like a mere assertion. Parfit anticipates this knee-jerk reaction (though I'm quoting from memory here).
Quote:
To say I survive as neither would be like someone who, when told of a drug that doubled one's longevity, regarded the taking of that drug as tantamount to suicide. That the extra years are to run concurrently in this case is an interesting difference. But it cannot mean there are no years to run.
In short, once diachronic identity is given up in favour of continuity, there is no constraint on how many persons one could in principle be diachronically continuous with. So what? The world seems to rule this out as a matter of fact; no further reason suggests itself for ruling it out conceptually as well.
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Clearly, the fact that you say both could exist causes serious problems.
Hmm. Again, I think your job was to argue for this, rather than just asserting it.
Quote:
Your clone will claim to be the continuation of you, but you know that he is the clone and you are the actual person who continues the original PC.
What's the problem, though? That we'll both claim to have been the same person? In the only tenable sense of diachronic unity, we'll both be right. But synchronically, neither of us will claim to be the other. We'll each say, "I'm me!", or, "I'm Clutch". Neither of us will say, "I'm really that other guy over there!", and our using the same name will be no different than the general phenomenon of distinct persons have the same name. No problem.
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Old 04-15-2003, 07:54 PM   #105
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Okay, first off, I don't pretend to have the knowledge or capabilities to provide any real substance to this discussion.

However, I have one question for mnkdbky: In Parfit's Personal Identity paper, which is I think what has been refered to for the last few posts, he talks about a scenario which he suggests is not practically unreasonable: that is, that an operation could be performed whereby the left and right sides of the brain are transplanted into host bodies. The bodies had empty skulls before the operation, so the two sides of the brain exist independently from one another or any other brain.

Given your theory of a soul, which of these resulting people would retain that soul, or would neither, or would both? I'd have thought, from what you said before about the soul's position being where it can act out its will (or something along those lines) that you'd be forced into the conclusion that the soul remains in both resulting men. But wouldn't this be precisely the problem that you perceive with the Bundle Theory (which I have to admit, I have no knowledge of whatsoever) in that it supposes that two people with precisely the same mental states are the one and the same? Your theory, assuming I was right in presuming your answer to the question, suggests that two people can share a soul, and thus are the same person, does it not? And so wouldn't that mean your theory is open to precisely the same criticism you're levelling at the BT?

I have to say that I feel quite out-gunned on this thread, and so if I've made a silly error then please be nice about correcting me.
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Old 04-16-2003, 07:45 AM   #106
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Default Re: Materialists are (possibly) Irrational

Quote:
Originally posted by mnkbdky
If you believe you are the same person that read this, then you must believe you have a soul--an immaterial substance that remains identical to itself throughout time.
1. Immateriality. Back to this quote from the OP. Maybe there is a clue here to the underlying disagreements. The term "immaterial substance" is self-contradictory to me and belief in the existence of such a thing irrational.

2. Forms. Now let's ask the question whether a "soul" is defined as material not. Certainly the soul exists, we can define it and discuss it - the issue is what form it takes. The absence of evidence that souls are physical entities (that survive the body in a separate physical form) points to souls being abstract entities.

3. Materialism (in my understanding) admits abstract entities if those abstracts are representations of other things. e.g. a photograph of a person is real but it is just a picture, not a real person. Thus, a person's soul can be an abstract representation (in the mind of the perceiver) of the relevant person's essential properties.

4. Bundles of Joy. Bundle Theory basically advocates compound properties such that any object that is perceived is perceived through the one or more properties that our organs of perception match it to. e.g. We may see (initially) something that is red but will be unable to discern its other features - hence it will have the property of being red plus associated spatio-temporal coordinates (for those not blind etc.). Later, we may perceive more properties of the same object such as car, later still a Chevrolet etc.

5. Identity is Subjective. This may be the other disconnect. I suspect Clutch and mnkbdky differ in their understanding of where identity is formed. Identity is formed within the mind of the perceiver - Ted doesn't (always) go around with a label "Ted" on him, he has the properties of Tedness to which we attach the name identity of Ted. The "properties of Tedness", which are abstract entities in our minds, are collectively the soul of Ted - merely a mental picture that exists in our mind/brain.

Ergo, materialists are not necessarily irrational.

Cheers, John
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Old 04-16-2003, 01:33 PM   #107
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Here is the situation:

Quote:
Originally posted by Michaelson
I have one question for mnkdbky: In Parfit's Personal Identity paper, which is I think what has been refered to for the last few posts, he talks about a scenario which he suggests is not practically unreasonable: that is, that an operation could be performed whereby the left and right sides of the brain are transplanted into host bodies. The bodies had empty skulls before the operation, so the two sides of the brain exist independently from one another or any other brain.
Here are the questions:

Quote:
Given your theory of a soul, which of these resulting people would retain that soul, or would neither, or would both?
Well, I am not sure I would identify the soul with the brain, or even half the brain. What I would do is say that the soul and the brain work together. Now, if it so happens that the soul has control over two body, then, I see no problem. Because, the person is identical to the soul, not the body. This is to say, one soul can have control over two body, or more for that matter.

Quote:
I'd have thought, from what you said before about the soul's position being where it can act out its will (or something along those lines) that you'd be forced into the conclusion that the soul remains in both resulting men. But wouldn't this be precisely the problem that you perceive with the Bundle Theory (which I have to admit, I have no knowledge of whatsoever) in that it supposes that two people with precisely the same mental states are the one and the same? Your theory, assuming I was right in presuming your answer to the question, suggests that two people can share a soul, and thus are the same person, does it not? And so wouldn't that mean your theory is open to precisely the same criticism you're levelling at the BT?
No, I am not open to the same objection. The body is not identical to the person. The person is identical to the soul. Therefore, one soul, two bodies=one person, two bodies. The bundle theory objection is an object to the claim that causation is able to retain identity.

It also seems to me to be no problem to say that two souls can exist is one or more bodies. Since the soul is the person and the body is not then each soul would be self identical not to the body. Of course, it might get frustrating if one soul is trying to move the left arm up and another soul is trying to move it down. Perhaps, though, we could say that one soul has control of the left side of the body and one soul has control of the right side of the body. Either way I see no problem. Interestly enough their are conjoined twins who have exactly this situation. They have two head and two sets of organs in one torso and one set of legs. The head on the left controls the left side of the body and the head on the riight controls the right side of their body. What is even more amazing is that they are very active children. In fact, they play baseball and volleyball. It was very cool to watch. You can read about their story at http://members.tripod.com/~midnightwill/twins.html
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Old 04-16-2003, 02:12 PM   #108
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Quote:
Originally posted by ex-xian
I've offered an alternate way the identity can be maintained thru time, but you haven't responded to it. Furthermore, you engage in your own "hand
waving" regaring the problems of dualism.


Originally posted by mnkbdky
I am sorry I don't remember yours, could you please cut and paste it again.
Why not; I've already posted it twice w/o a response. Third time's the charm, so they say...
Quote:
irstly, the entire point of my previous posts is that it is impossible to say that any self
exists at any one time. A self exists only as a set of experiences continuous in time and
space. The remark about them being non-uninterrupted was to refute the common claims
that sleep/unconsciousness contradicts this claim. If this point is belabored, I'm sure that
someone else can adequately argue the point. People are not one person one moment,
and another person the next because of experiences. Rather the person is the sum of
experiences. This means that a self's personhood is continually in process. Indeed, I hold
that all of reality is in process. See whitehead's "Process and Reality."
Quote:
Originally posted by mnkbdky
I suggest you read my response again.
Which one? Could you cut and paste it?

Quote:
More
How is it emperical science? Yes, we can see that the pin prick causes pain, but how is
the question "Why does it do this and not something else?", part of science. There is
nothing that I no of that can emperically answer that question, nor is there any
philosophical answer either.
The mechanism of the pain is empircal. The mechanism whereby the soul "commands" the body is not.

Quote:
Originally posted by ex-xian
Also, you have stated that the soul is immaterial. Thus the in no place does
the soul exist. Or to say another way, for all x, there is no x such that the
soul exists there. Therefore, the soul exists nowhere.
Ax(~Sx)<=>~ExSx


Originally posted by mnkbdky



I'll deal with that latter,
I look forward to you response.
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