Originally posted by Whitestar
...would he or she survive the procedure considering that matter and energy are both interconvertible, or would it be a replica?
everymorning when you wake up you are a replica of
who you were yesterday
you arent made of exactly the same atoms you were yesterday
a lot of cells have died a lot of nitrogen has been flushed out in urine
a lot of carbon from dead cells has been burned up and breathed out in CO2
a lot of skin has sloughed off
a lot of replacement stuff has been replicated and put in place and is operation
identity (self) is independent of material
you are a replica made of different material but somehow
(I don't remember what the turnover rate is, when I saw the calculation some time back it surprised me how rapid it is)
but somehow----do we really understand how----this replica remains the
same you
I see no advantage to annihilating the material of a body and converting it to energy----that seems pointless.
What one wants to do is to extract the INFORMATION and then
create an exact replica from off-the-shelf chemicals.
converting matter to energy and energy to matter would be unnecessary, inefficient, time-consuming and on the whole a bit "trek"-ish.
the identity of the person must reside in the information and not in the material---so what happens to the material seems irrelevant
but producing an exact replica with precise information obtained non-destructively seems like a good thing to strive for----albeit not feasible by present means----and would presumably yield an individual with the same memories and personality