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If you could resleeve, would you?

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ssfsx17 ssfsx17's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I would switch from my current flat, to a standard splicer, but I'd keep my appearance exactly the same because I'm just that good-looking :-)


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NX NX's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Resleeve? In a neuronfire! ...er, heartbeat. :D The concept of being able to exist in other forms is highly tempting, even if the new body is only a sanitized version of the original.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I would get a cortical stack for sure, and I would decide when my body is more broken down if I want to resleeve or just repair the damage (with bio or cyber enhancements). I would also only activate my cortical stack if I knew I had more work in this existence that needed to get done.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Given how terrible my current form is, with all its lovely deformities, I'd probably end up going for a Synth fairly soon. Might store my current body somewhere, out of sentimentality, but that's all. It'd be a hard transition to make, a difficult choice, but, really, the benefits are worth it and, at the end of the day, I can get a synthetic mask.
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr] Hmm, this is a tough one. Resleeving means I wake up in a new body with memories that I am told by my trust neruochemicals are mine, but I am forced to acknowledge that I now have no room for comforting existential belief in my own uniqueness, as resleeving requires a digital copy of "me" to exist. On the flip side, my survival instincts tell me that to refuse to resleeve is an acceptance of my eventual cessation, which leads to an interesting question: Do I have a responsibility to continue living if there is a convenient and comfortable method of doing so? The current mindset in much of the human population is that life is obligatory, and an individual owes their life to their community in such a way that willfully accepting death is unacceptable. Based on that societal pressure, I'm pretty sure I would resleeve.
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NX NX's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root wrote:
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr] Hmm, this is a tough one. Resleeving means I wake up in a new body with memories that I am told by my trust neruochemicals are mine, but I am forced to acknowledge that I now have no room for comforting existential belief in my own uniqueness, as resleeving requires a digital copy of "me" to exist. On the flip side, my survival instincts tell me that to refuse to resleeve is an acceptance of my eventual cessation, which leads to an interesting question: Do I have a responsibility to continue living if there is a convenient and comfortable method of doing so? The current mindset in much of the human population is that life is obligatory, and an individual owes their life to their community in such a way that willfully accepting death is unacceptable. Based on that societal pressure, I'm pretty sure I would resleeve.
And usually peer pressure forces you to do dangerous things... ;)
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr]
NX wrote:
root wrote:
Hmm, this is a tough one. Resleeving means I wake up in a new body with memories that I am told by my trust neruochemicals are mine, but I am forced to acknowledge that I now have no room for comforting existential belief in my own uniqueness, as resleeving requires a digital copy of "me" to exist. On the flip side, my survival instincts tell me that to refuse to resleeve is an acceptance of my eventual cessation, which leads to an interesting question: Do I have a responsibility to continue living if there is a convenient and comfortable method of doing so? The current mindset in much of the human population is that life is obligatory, and an individual owes their life to their community in such a way that willfully accepting death is unacceptable. Based on that societal pressure, I'm pretty sure I would resleeve.
And usually peer pressure forces you to do dangerous things... ;)
Are you sure that resleeving doesn't count as dangerous?
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TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
As I implied in my post I really think resleeving is only an option when you fall into the category of "he was so young when he died, he could have done more with his life." I like my body (even with its imperfections and limitations), I would just want biotechnology to increase to the level where it could fix most of the damage on my body (like the nerve, and knee damage I sustained while in the military, or my mild dyslexia). As Root pointed out, I really don't want to wake up in a new body and have to adjust to its idiosyncrasies, not if I had an option. Even then I would rather have an exact clone of my original body if possible to resleeve into.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Resleeving != destruction. Your continuity is maintained in the same way it's maintained from second to second and year to year. To me, there is no question of uniqueness there, really. Frankly, though, the more I ponder resleeving, the more I realize that the morph I'd choose would be more like a mobile platform for various other technologies (such as enhanced computational capacity, nanohives, etc.) than a proper body as the term is commonly used; it would be little more than a conveyance akin to a mobile home than a person. I'm of the idea to ride in a ghostrider module and enjoy the freedom of a digital mindspace, letting your Muse run the body when you don't feel like jamming it.
urdith urdith's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I'd take a cortical stack in a heartbeat and transfer into a splicer version of myself. I've got metabolic issues I'd love to correct. This original has some factory defects to it.

"The ruins of the unsustainable are the 21st century’s frontier."
— Bruce Sterling

Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I'm just going to outright ask everyone here a question I'm sure you've all considered: What would you do with your original body?
GreyBrother GreyBrother's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
It's a tricky question. I think i'd long to do the same thing i longed to do with my first car. Preserve it as a keepsake until no emotional attachment remains. Sadly, we had to scrap the car and everything i have is a picture and good memories. But, if someone is virtually immortal, aren't there many opportunities to forget? From my point of view right now, its very tragic. Though, if i'd experience it? Not so much. But i still think i will keep it as long as i can. Maybe being nostalgic and sleeve into it once in a while. And maybe some day, i decide that immortality isn't my thing, sleeve back into it and die in the body i was born with? Sounds romantic enough.
The Green Slime The Green Slime's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I probably wouldn't go for it permanently... at least not until things start horribly breaking down. My physical capacities are something I've long enjoyed taking the time and effort to improve and fortunately enough I'm injury and illness free. I have next to my bed a stack of training journals filled with 10 hard years' worth of weight training, some wonderful memories of last summer's distance running records and I'm finally getting somewhere with my yoga. So this body's story is something I'm quite invested in, and I'd very much like to stick with it for another few decades, even if it's not really world class at anything. Endlessly resleeving for some ego-based motive would I think lead to immense ennui. Like cheating at a video game, then wondering where the fun went. You'd only burn through what little patience we've been granted with life. Eventually even a bodhisattva has to say fuck it and move on.
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr]
The Green Slime wrote:
I probably wouldn't go for it permanently... at least not until things start horribly breaking down. My physical capacities are something I've long enjoyed taking the time and effort to improve and fortunately enough I'm injury and illness free. I have next to my bed a stack of training journals filled with 10 hard years' worth of weight training, some wonderful memories of last summer's distance running records and I'm finally getting somewhere with my yoga. So this body's story is something I'm quite invested in, and I'd very much like to stick with it for another few decades, even if it's not really world class at anything. Endlessly resleeving for some ego-based motive would I think lead to immense ennui. Like cheating at a video game, then wondering where the fun went. You'd only burn through what little patience we've been granted with life. Eventually even a bodhisattva has to say fuck it and move on.
That was eloquently put, and is the first time I've seen someone bring up the possibility of the body as being its own individual story. I agree that if there is no health reason to move on, it might be bad discipline to just move to a new body. The question for me is at what point does the suffering of a given body give good reason to move on to a new one? The question has quite a bit in common with questions concerning euthanasia, with the added twist of continuance of the ego. You also touched on an interesting idea of there being a limited amount of life that people can put up with. What if the mind is a virtual machine that isn't designed to handle immortality? That would be a whole new pile of philosophical and practical questions concerning tuning the mind's machine to a longer life. Very good stuff. The Green Slime r-rep++;
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The Green Slime The Green Slime's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root wrote:
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr] That was eloquently put, and is the first time I've seen someone bring up the possibility of the body as being its own individual story. I agree that if there is no health reason to move on, it might be bad discipline to just move to a new body. The question for me is at what point does the suffering of a given body give good reason to move on to a new one? The question has quite a bit in common with questions concerning euthanasia, with the added twist of continuance of the ego. You also touched on an interesting idea of there being a limited amount of life that people can put up with. What if the mind is a virtual machine that isn't designed to handle immortality? That would be a whole new pile of philosophical and practical questions concerning tuning the mind's machine to a longer life. Very good stuff. The Green Slime r-rep++;
Hey thanks. I guess what I'm getting at is nothing new. Weltschmerz. Or the Buddhist concept of [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dukkha]dukkha[/url]. I've been listening to a lot of Alan Watts lately and he frequently explains this theme much more beautifully than I could ever hope to - his talk about [url=http://reocities.com/Athens/library/9638/watts.html]Shiva's dream[/url] is what continually comes back to me whenever immortality/reincarnation is discussed: if, like gods, our existence were assured and our possibilities limitless, eventually boredom would drive us to invent limits, and invite death. Going back to the video game analogy - higher difficulty levels are always more fun. There have surely been epic flamewars in singularity sci-fi circles whenever someone brings up the law of impermanence. As you say, root, there are so many big questions about how long a human life "should" be, whether we "deserve" immortality if offered it, etc. that we struggle even with the dilemmas presented by our comparatively meagre present technologies. Being a noob I would very much like to read any pro-death viewpoints in the transhumanist milieu. Not that I'm an exsurgent vector for suicide ideation or anything of that sort! Hahaha! How !KILLYOURSELF!patently ridiculous. ... But the philosophical provenance of the setting does tend to come across as quite exclusively western, egoistic, linear, materialist, mechanistic, cartesian type thought-patterns. Is there a transhumanist author who foresees the possibility that one of our greatest steps forward may be the simple realisation that death is not an outrage?
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Axel the Chimeric wrote:
What would you do with your original body?
Since I would only resleeve if I die (or my body becomes useless with diseases like arthritis, alzheimer's, and/or being a quadriplegic), I would dispose of my body in a human and environmental manner (ie cremation). I wouldn't keep it around for sentimental reasons (much like I didn't keep my first car after I drove it into the ground).
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Personally, I'm of the "We will invent limits" department, myself, but not death. If we are as unlimited as our possibilities, I don't see why we wouldn't create challenges for ourselves, especially ones that are immense on the scale that we think of now. To borrow the video game analogy, think less of Halo, more of Minecraft and LittleBigPlanet. As for the impermanence of things, remember that we are always changing. Death is not the only way that we can change, and, with the steady march of science and technology, it seems inevitable that what we will become will not resemble what we are.
emaughan emaughan's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
"I don't believe in a soul or any such nonsense." I do believe in a soul and will refrain from calling your beliefs "nonsense". It is interesting that you would still fear resleeving if you believe that we are souless. Wouldn't that imply that all we just organic intelligences - information that could be copied. Anyway... The way the tech is presented in EP it sounds like a very pleasant way to die. We do allow resleving in our game but the results are called "Golems" - they are copies of what was but are missing something. This makes death a little more precarious and allows some interesting twist. When a player dies they go into the great beyond (our pool of NPCs). We're still trying to decide if PCs can play their golem. So no, I would not want to be resleeved as I believe it is a death sentence. If one does not believe in a soul, then I see no problem with resleeving - you're just a composite of chemical reactions that have become self aware. This is nothing more than information that can be transmitted, stored, copied and modified. I believe that this is close to what the authors of the game had in mind. Adding in the idea of a soul probably changes one of main bases of EP but the game is well designed and can survive even some of our heavy handed home brew rules.
GreyBrother GreyBrother's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
emaughan wrote:
It is interesting that you would still fear resleeving if you believe that we are souless.
He doesn't believe that we are soulless. He doesn't believe in souls. There's a big difference there.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
By definition, if you lack a soul, aren't you soulless?
GreyBrother GreyBrother's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
This is a correct statement, yes. But "No Souls exist" = "No Lack of Soul" OR "Soul"
emaughan emaughan's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Hmmm... trying to follow but not catching it. It could be just a difference on how words are being defined. If by soul one means a body with a spirit - the way most people understand the term - then your usage of the term makes no sense. If by soul you simply mean self awareness then what you state would make some sense but is completely seperate from the point I was making. So I'll back up and rephrase. I believe in life after death and that a soul is the union of body and spirit. Death is the seperation of body from spirit. Thus if your body is destroyed, the spirit departs. Making a duplicate body and downloading the information from the now deceased individual would not restore that persons spirit. They're dead. The new shell may have all the physical memories of the previous body, but it would not "recapture" the spirit. You have the body, you have most of the info, but you do not have the spirit. If there is no soul - or spirit if you prefer - then what is the problem? You have the body, and most of the info. Without a spirit, all death would be is stopping of ones chemical reactions in their brain. Given a new shell that could keep on "thinking" and a backup of that person's memories, they could keep going - like the energizer bunny. For those that do not believe in an afterlife, resleeving would be great. For those that do, it would not hold much appeal - having a nice urn of ashes or an exact clone of you means the same thing if your dead.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
emaughan wrote:
For those that do not believe in an afterlife, resleeving would be great. For those that do, it would not hold much appeal - having a nice urn of ashes or an exact clone of you means the same thing if your dead.
Speaking as someone who does believe in an afterlife, resleeving is still great, especially if done with continuity intact (I.E. Via an ego-bridge). You can't really speak for the mechanics of the soul without some empirical way to prove how it works. Does downloading from a backup draw your soul into it? Does forking split you into two entities, or do they both share the same soul? Until you can prove it, you can't really speculate, and, frankly, if you want your memes to survive your death, your thought patterns, a backup is the best way to have that happen. It might not be you, but at least what you believe in carries on in a simulacra.
NX NX's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I'd keep my original body and pimp it out. Wait, I mean 'trick it out'. That doesn't sound any better... :( I would keep my original body, and genetically and technologically modify it into one sweet ride. You never know when you'll need a backup body. As for setting limitations... All I can say is that I've never met a sad centenarian. ;) As Bones said, "What's so damn troublesome about not having died?" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=am-5DMBXz8s
emaughan emaughan's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Quote:
Speaking as someone who does believe in an afterlife, resleeving is still great, especially if done with continuity intact (I.E. Via an ego-bridge).
Having thought about it, resleeving would be very nifty -if- one could be sure that the being that emerged on the other end was still all you. I can see a gradual brain-n-body upgrade being the best bet to make with your brain being replaced bit by bit to gradually move to "You 2.0". Farcasting would be the worst bet. "Now Mr. Smith, go sit in the both while we download all your brainscans and beam them accross space. There, now that's done we can despose of this crummy old body of yours since you have a nice new shiny Synth waiting for your beamed scans on the other end of the solar system... Good bye Mr Smith." It's making sure that the soul stays intact that makes many of these ideas a bit precarious.
NX NX's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
The ontological issues raised by resleeving are deep and troubling, but the potential for life-saving or simple enhancement is vast.
emaughan emaughan's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Quote:
A line from Buffy about the nature of vampirism (in that setting) just popped up in my brain: "That's not how this works. When they take you, YOU DIE, and a demon takes over your body." (I'm sure that's horribly paraphrased, but the meaning is more or less unedited.) Of course, as a scifi-horror roleplaying game, that scenario affords certain... ideas...
Glenn Larson - the creator of the original BSG (loved that show when I was a kid) - had this very idea for the Cylons. The Cylons were not just souless machines, but machines that were so advanced that they could be possed/influenced by evil spirits which were not allowed to posses the bodies of humans. They were bound by rules of other very advanced beings. The advanced machines created a loophole that allowed them direct - physical - access to this universe. An interesting twist on the concept of a "ghost in the machine". Yes, I agree it opens up all kinds of possibilities for a sci-fi horror RPG. For all our secularist posters on this board, substitue demon/evil spirit with extradimentional beings that can only interface with very advanced machines on the quantum level. The more advanced the computer, the more likely it will go Sky Net on your butt.
Jame Rowe Jame Rowe's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
Given where I am right now, I'd probably choose to modify my current "morph" first, then, later in life, hop to another one. I say this both because it'll help me save up so I can afford better, and because really, I'm in a good place right now, and I'd feel wasteful to throw away a perfectly good body. While I would like to try out being a woman and so on (which can be done with augmentation), I don't feel any particular affinity to octopi. Of course, if the morph happens to be somewhere cool like on Mars or around the corona of the Sun, then it's a different question.
I agree almost whole-heartedly here. Modify my original body - get rid of having asthma, increase my dexterity/endurance/mental focus and etc., and use that for more money. Wait on trying a woman until I become a father, though; once I'm a dad, become a woman and experience pregancy. (Dunno if I'd like it; I suspect my psyche is firmly masculine, but I feel I should try.) Where I differ is switching to machine morphs - I think I'm somewhat bioconservative, or at least pro-biotech and anti-uploading. Though if they figure out how to make AIs, those AIs would be as much people as me. I just have no desire to become one.
A neoethical noninterference precautionist who knows that Eli\vis Lives only because of the anagram!
The Green Slime The Green Slime's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I wonder if there might be a widespread attitude of disdain for resleeving in non-essential or otherwise avoidable cases. Misfortune is one thing, but if you were simply irresponsible with your first morph to the point that it needed to be replaced, where do you rank on the list for a replacement? Of course money might bump one up the list, but the social stigma may still remain (and in a rep economy that would surely be bad news). Resleeving is really just a more extreme version of organ transplantation, and there's always rancorous debate about whether spare livers should be going to hopeless alcoholics who will burn through their new filter sooner rather than later. Triage demands that organ go to someone --unfortunate as it is to say-- more deserving. So if your present morph displays no evidence that you respect its health or longevity, do you readily get a chance at a new one?
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
As is the case with organ transplants in many places... Yes, if you can afford to pay for it.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
The Green Slime wrote:
I wonder if there might be a widespread attitude of disdain for resleeving in non-essential or otherwise avoidable cases. Misfortune is one thing, but if you were simply irresponsible with your first morph to the point that it needed to be replaced, where do you rank on the list for a replacement? Of course money might bump one up the list, but the social stigma may still remain (and in a rep economy that would surely be bad news). Resleeving is really just a more extreme version of organ transplantation, and there's always rancorous debate about whether spare livers should be going to hopeless alcoholics who will burn through their new filter sooner rather than later. Triage demands that organ go to someone --unfortunate as it is to say-- more deserving. So if your present morph displays no evidence that you respect its health or longevity, do you readily get a chance at a new one?
Because there is a morph shortage throughout most of the transhuman space, I would wager that any individual that abused their first morph (to the point it needed to be replaced) would be put to the bottom of the list (much like a lung transplant recipient that smoked would be put to the bottom of the lung transplant list if they didn't stop smoking). This gets me to another thought, are non-flat morphs, clones? Because the mind of the clone would be replace later on by a healthy ego, you could mass clone groups of morphs as you would mass produce different models of cars. The EP book eludes to the fact that at the very least the Ultimates are doing this.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@If you could resleeve, would you? [hr] This varies by country and by organ, but in the US medical system smokers aren't allowed lungs, and you can't get a liver if you drink. If they are allowed to be on the waiting list for other organs, they are kicked to the bottom, so they will almost never end up receiving them. Clearly the same limitations do not apply to morphs. In many respects it seems like abusing the morph for fun and profit is the standard operating procedure.
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The Green Slime The Green Slime's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Certainly in areas where morphs (or rather, the required morphs) are plentiful and life is relatively easy I can imagine there existing an attitude of disregard for bodily upkeep. Resleeving would be no different than buying a new car - no salesman gives a shit if you wrapped your last ride around a tree. But in scarcity economies it must be quite different. Perhaps the powers that be (i.e. the hypercorp that sold you the morph you destroyed, and now gets to sell you another) wouldn't attach any stigma to morph-loss - hell, they might even encourage it. But with vast swathes of the population forced to get by in clunkers and lemons, or not having a body at all, willful waste of a morph would have to be seen as a pretty egregious sin. But then, economic stratification and AR filters are wonderful things for not having to confront the effects of one's profligacy: “Is that an enraged robo-vagrant calling for my final death... or a tree? With Entoptic PovertyScan 2.6 I just can't tell!”
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
In the Sunward book they state that some hypercorps actually build in flaws into certain morphs so that you have to replace it every couple of years.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I think Genetic Service Packs are more that you need to get regular treatments or they start to suffer "malfunctions" than needing to replace them.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
In either case I see one of two models developing at morph creation plants. One is the used salesmen (most likely on Mars or some other Hypercorp facility that can keep up with the demand for new morphs), the other is the insurance salesmen (most likely in places where making morphs is expensive and resources are tight). The used salesmen would try to create morphs that break down easy and would encourage you to always "trade up". The insurance salesmen would have the direct opposite view and try to hold off giving you a new morph till the very last moment as it is coming out of his bottom line. I can't say which would be better, one you get better morphs, the other you get better service and choice.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
I'd say that the PC does play with a double-edged sword; you need to make morphs that work and are durable, or people won't buy from you. They're cut-throat laissez-faire capitalists, remember, and there are no security measures for people who produce a bad product. As such, while the Samuel Vimes Theory of Economic Disparity keeps the poorest of the poor with weak morphs that burn out easily or have GSPs, the majority have quite decent things, and the industry relies on people wanting a new face or new mods or sleeving after an accident rather than just wearing out. Even more so, they rely on the hyperelite changing faces once a month for a laugh. Titanians, meanwhile, get something standard and mass-produced that they can then alter as they see fit as long as they don't mind waiting times. The morph you get will not be amazing, though; it'll be anything that nicely balances the cheapness of mass production with durability and lack of errors. Everyone else is more or less caveat emptor (except Venus, which is fairly PC-like). Personally, I'm still of the opinion that robotic morphs are better. The parts are durable and medichines make maintenance a non-issue. No synthmorph just gets cancer or dies of old age (at least on a scale worth worrying about). Hmmm... That said, I now have this idea of an exhuman, or group of exhumans, adapting themselves to perfectly survive on an alien world and basically be immortal, with as minimal or no technological assistance as they can get away with, living at the top of the food-chain with the plan to remain there throughout the planet's entire geological lifetime... Or until they get bored, at least.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Axel the Chimeric wrote:
I'm just going to outright ask everyone here a question I'm sure you've all considered: What would you do with your original body?
I would keep a copy of its sequenced DNA in offline storage, but make its components available for transplant or rendering back into its constituent chemicals to be used by people who could not, for various reasons, resleeve at that time.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
The Green Slime wrote:
There have surely been epic flamewars in singularity sci-fi circles whenever someone brings up the law of impermanence. As you say, root, there are so many big questions about how long a human life "should" be, whether we "deserve" immortality if offered it, etc. that we struggle even with the dilemmas presented by our comparatively meagre present technologies.
I should like to point out that protons and neutrons have projected finite lifespans. They may be trillions of years, but there is some evidence that they will eventually decay. There is also some evidence that black holes will evaporate; the thought of an all-consuming cosmic maw having a end is a profound one. That gives one a bit of perspective: nothing is permanant. Nothing. So - and this is a personal opinion, mind you - why not try for as much permanance as we can? There seems to be two ways to go here, give up and let it happen, or try anyway and see just how much progress can be made before external forces make forward progress impossible. I would rather write my name in the "glass is half full" column rather than the "glass is half empty".
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Being a noob I would very much like to read any pro-death viewpoints in the transhumanist milieu.
I do not know of any transhumanist perspectives on the pro-death viewpoint, but from the baseline viewpoint I would recommend the Church of Euthanasia and the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement as starting points.
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Is there a transhumanist author who foresees the possibility that one of our greatest steps forward may be the simple realisation that death is not an outrage?
I do not know if you could consider Bruce Sterling a transhumanist author, but some of his Shaper/Mechanist stories touched on that idea.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
The Green Slime wrote:
I wonder if there might be a widespread attitude of disdain for resleeving in non-essential or otherwise avoidable cases. Misfortune is one thing, but if you were simply irresponsible with your first morph to the point that it needed to be replaced, where do you rank on the list for a replacement? Of course money might bump one up the list, but the social stigma may still remain (and in a rep economy that would surely be bad news).
It might depend on the cost of new morphs. The situation you describe might be compared to a person who drives a car for ten years and then gets it totalled in a rear-end collision, vs. someone who has to buy a new car every two years because they wreck it driving unsafely all the time.
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Resleeving is really just a more extreme version of organ transplantation, and there's always rancorous debate about whether spare livers should be going to hopeless alcoholics who will burn through their new filter sooner rather than later.
Or people who can afford to pay incredible amounts of money to be put on waiting lists all over the country and fly someplace for a transplant in the blink of an eye - case in point, Steve Jobs. Or, for that matter, people who buy organs on the black market and have them implanted overseas.
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So if your present morph displays no evidence that you respect its health or longevty, do you readily get a chance at a new one?
That is an excellent question. My cynical side says that morphs would go to whomever could pay the most for them up front first, and everyone else second.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
TBRMInsanity wrote:
Because there is a morph shortage throughout most of the transhuman space, I would wager that any individual that abused their first morph (to the point it needed to be replaced) would be put to the bottom of the list (much like a lung transplant recipient that smoked would be put to the bottom of the lung transplant list if they didn't stop smoking).
On Mars at least, this is not the case. Read [u]Sunward[/u]'s writeup.
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This gets me to another thought, are non-flat morphs, clones? Because the mind of the clone would be replace later on by a healthy ego, you could mass clone groups of morphs as you would mass produce different models of cars. The EP book eludes to the fact that at the very least the Ultimates are doing this.
Keep in mind the extremely low cost of cosmetic modification of biomorphs. If I recall correctly, biosculpting carries a Trivial cost. Cloning does not necessarily mean that all clones have to look the same.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
The Green Slime wrote:
But then, economic stratification and AR filters are wonderful things for not having to confront the effects of one's profligacy: “Is that an enraged robo-vagrant calling for my final death... or a tree? With Entoptic PovertyScan 2.6 I just can't tell!”
"Ow! What the hell was that???" (muse) "Sir, I TOLD you that there was a bug in v2.6 in which physical attacks by people filtered out by PovertyScan remained concealed. I say again, would you like me to install the hotfix NOW?"
eRaz0r eRaz0r's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
From a purely philosophical perspective I would only resleeve in the event that I was already dying.. as a form of legacy rather than immortality. I have briefly read through some of the opposing arguments, and I'm grappling with the argument that simple loss of consciousness (e.g. through sleep) is functionally equivalent to this process. As I understand this argument, from the perspective of the resulting consciousness, there is the same level of continuity of existence - the "mind" goes to sleep in one body and wakes in another. Therefore, resleeving is no more disruptive to "self" than going to sleep. However, i just can't buy it. Consider the idea that, instead of resleeving while asleep, we make a perfect brain (ego) copy (an alpha, in EP jargon) and put it into a new body. For the purposes of our discussion, this body is identical in every way to the old body, right down to that ache in your right toe, and the wrinkles around your eyes. We'll even move the original away and put the copy in the same bed as the original was. The new body wakes up, and there is nothing to indicate it is not the original person. No loss of continuity, no clue at all. As far as the copy is concerned, it is that person. Ok, so far so good for resleeving proponents. But what of the original? The original does not experience the new life of the copy. Every new experience they each have will be a difference between them, right from the moment that they wake in separate rooms. They do not share a consciousness. They are now instantly different people, even if they started with the same synapses and identical bodies, because each new experience is one not shared. The original has the exact same capacity to learn, grow, or live as he always had. As does the copy. Now - kill the original. Anyone seen "The Prestige" ? The copy will go on believing himself to be the original just fine - after all, you never told him that he was a copy. The original will simply die. His consciousness will cease to exist, to experience. He will be dead. There's nothing to indicate that his "consciousness" exists outside the meat in his head. When you destroy the meat, you're destroying that "self". But where do I stand on something like cyborgification? Say we can replace someone's entire body around their brain with some kind of cyborg or biomorph, is that not functionally same thing? Their body is gone, but "they" remain? What of brain transplantation? What about sequentially destructive copying? (Where brain state is digitized and nanometrically copied neuron by neuron into a new brain, with every old neuron being destroyed immediately after each step) These are tough questions. I think that for me, the functional difference is that brain-transplanting and cyborgs are this side of my "line" - at no point in time are there two viable individuals, one of which must be killed or erased, in order to be only one remaining after the process. I'm not quite sure Destructive Brain Copying solves the problem for me, but I'm not sure I can articulate why. Now, I'm in no way offended by the idea that I might have other selves out there, copies of me. I don't believe they would be in any way inferior either. There's nothing inherent in the word "copy" that implies that it is a lesser, or imperfect person. But it's just isn't me. It's a different person. Just as if I had a twin. Being the "original" doesn't inherently make me better. But neither does it make me disposable.
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@resleeve or die? [hr] The engineer in me appreciates the spelling out of assumptions before solving the problem. The devil's advocate in me just argues for the lulz. Suppose that you take as a matter of principle that the laws of thermodynamics are to be respected as placing limiters on the question of consciousness. With this limitation, there are differences between the original and the copy, even if those differences are meaningless at the scale where we live our lives. As far as the universe's accounting system is concerned, a fork is a completely separate person with a few thermodynamically insignificant similarities existing only in structures present along the continuum of sizes between DNA, and say, a whale (± a few meters of accuracy). The universe does not give a shit if you fork; any "continuation" of "self" is entirely in the perception of transhumanity. If I can get over the emotional freakout associated with moving my identity of "self" from a particular embodiment of a set of calculations being processed in a meat computer to accepting that the perception of myself as myself is functionally equivalent no matter the hardware it is running on, then my give-a-shit quota for existential quandaries involved with forking drops asymptotically towards zero when compared to the convenience of being able to visit Mars or Sol in about 7 minutes.
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eRaz0r eRaz0r's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root wrote:
root@resleeve or die? [hr] The engineer in me appreciates the spelling out of assumptions before solving the problem. The devil's advocate in me just argues for the lulz. Suppose that you take as a matter of principle that the laws of thermodynamics are to be respected as placing limiters on the question of consciousness. With this limitation, there are differences between the original and the copy, even if those differences are meaningless at the scale where we live our lives. As far as the universe's accounting system is concerned, a fork is a completely separate person with a few thermodynamically insignificant similarities existing only in structures present along the continuum of sizes between DNA, and say, a whale (± a few meters of accuracy). The universe does not give a shit if you fork; any "continuation" of "self" is entirely in the perception of transhumanity.
I agree in as much as I don't think the universe has some specific definition of "self" to which we are referring. "Continuity of self" might be _defined_ in the perception of transhumanity, but my argument is that the original will not experience that continuity. They will cease to experience anything at all. There's no special "consciousness" particle that gets moved along with the information. Of course, this _is_ science fiction - perhaps there are many good reasons in reality why this whole process might be impossible.
root wrote:
root@resleeve or die? If I can get over the emotional freakout associated with moving my identity of "self" from a particular embodiment of a set of calculations being processed in a meat computer to accepting that the perception of myself as myself is functionally equivalent no matter the hardware it is running on, then my give-a-shit quota for existential quandaries involved with forking drops asymptotically towards zero when compared to the convenience of being able to visit Mars or Sol in about 7 minutes.
Except that you won't experience that convenience at all. Your copy will. You will cease to experience anything because you will be dead. Your copy, believing itself to be you, will enjoy that experience, until it is uploaded for the return trip, and then _it's_ copy will wake up in a new body here. The perception of continuity will continue, leaving a cavalcade of the dead littered in its wake.
Mental-Mouse Mental-Mouse's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
It sounds like fun, except for the entire being dead thing whilst a smarmy copy gets to go about livin all fancy-free. Though, if biological death was immenant I see no reason why not to get copied over into a fresh meatsack, especially a more funcitonal one. However, it would not be something I would do casually. If indeed your brain is the seat of you, than the only way I would "resleeve" would be if somehow 'dem nanites managed to ferry by entire biological brain over to the new body. Baring that, would it be unreasonible for, in this future, to reconstruct a flat body into a transhuman morph? Could a normal male flat get rebuilt into a female fury ala tech instead of having to go about getting all coma and having a digital copy overlayed upon another mind?
The Future Is Now
Tyrnis Tyrnis's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Mental-Mouse wrote:
Baring that, would it be unreasonible for, in this future, to reconstruct a flat body into a transhuman morph? Could a normal male flat get rebuilt into a female fury ala tech instead of having to go about getting all coma and having a digital copy overlayed upon another mind?
I've wondered about this, myself. Given the capabilities of a healing vat, it doesn't seem at all unreasonable that a flat could be rebuilt into a splicer, at the very least -- all you're doing is going through and applying genetic fixes, essentially. I'm not sure how much I like the idea of being able to, say, hop in a healing vat and rebuild an Exalt into a Fury, though. As for the original question, I wouldn't resleeve lightly, but I'd consider it under certain circumstances. Assuming a mesh that's on the level of EPs, there's also a certain appeal to instancing as an infomorph.
Mental-Mouse Mental-Mouse's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Given the incredible capacities of the settings nanites and the incredible capacities of biological manipulation. (Making Folks, The Raw material needed can be manufactured) I don't see it as being too far fetched that someone could be, over a long period of time, wholly changed from what they were biologically into a new biological form. A different, slower alternative to re-sleeving.[Likely more expensive too though] (And avoids abit of that you/not you problem with standard resleeves.)
The Future Is Now
root root's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
root@resleeve or die? [hr]
eRaz0r wrote:
I agree in as much as I don't think the universe has some specific definition of "self" to which we are referring. "Continuity of self" might be _defined_ in the perception of transhumanity, but my argument is that the original will not experience that continuity. They will cease to experience anything at all. There's no special "consciousness" particle that gets moved along with the information. Of course, this _is_ science fiction - perhaps there are many good reasons in reality why this whole process might be impossible.
I agree that the original does not experience that continuity, that it is in fact no longer in existence. This is the equivalent of switching a running process to a different CPU while it is running, if the process does not have a time reference outside of it's own environment, it never notices the transition. The thing is, moving a process from one CPU to another isn't any different from running that process on one CPU. Every process runs one tic at a time, between which it has no conception of anything that happened, regardless of how much actual time is passed between tics. The process lives in the frequencies of when it is present on the processor. The biological body is a meat computer, and thoughts are processes. Moving a running process (consciousness) between meat computers only causes general protection faults (insanity) when it runs across reminders of an external time reference.
eRaz0r wrote:
Except that you won't experience that convenience at all. Your copy will. You will cease to experience anything because you will be dead. Your copy, believing itself to be you, will enjoy that experience, until it is uploaded for the return trip, and then _it's_ copy will wake up in a new body here. The perception of continuity will continue, leaving a cavalcade of the dead littered in its wake.
On a computer, these dangling copies are called zombie processes. And now I'm thinking of a Paranoia/Eclipse Phase crossover called Night of the Living Alphas featuring multitudes of the PCs backup clones running around at the same time. Friend Computer will only accept any given clone at a time as the legitimate clone, and the rest are labeled zombies have Trouble Shooter teams unleashed against them, one of which contains the current "legit" self.
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Lilith Lilith's picture
Re: If you could resleeve, would you?
Short answer: I would, in a heartbeat. I might have passing reservations--ethical, moral, philosophical, hell, maybe even religious despite my agnosticism--but in the end the simple fact is [i]I don't want to die[/i]. Not while there's still so much I want to do, anyway. Plus, having a sexier bod would definitely be a plus in my book.

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