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Invasion of the Humans

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Wayfinder Wayfinder's picture
Invasion of the Humans
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul. What if the real humans showed up to reclaim the Solar System? Might that be an interesting, Twilight Zone twist? And just who are the real humans?
Haxar Haxar's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Technically, the real humans would be the Jovians in this case, they're the biggest group of bioconservatives in mostly unaugmented flats around so they count. I too had the "but you're still dead" thought, while reading the opening fiction. Sava's existence will continue but the original Sava actually died while a new person just like them took their place. Even if Sava had transmitted their ego with the data, they would still be dead, and a copy of their mind would be running around instead. Same goes for people who switch morphs. But if you follow this line of thinking, it starts getting philosophical about the nature of the individual. And also very depressing when playing EP.
Wayfinder Wayfinder's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
But, aren't Jovians also capable of resleeving? From what I gather from the book, it seems everyone has a cortical stack, so if that's the case how much resleeving do the Jovians do? Perhaps what they do is more along the lines of morph augmentation.
Haxar Haxar's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Not really. Maybe some have those, probably the guys in charge, but not all of them. The pre-made Jovian Spy is the only one who doesn't have the Cortical Stack implant, besides the Infomorph.
Sir_Psycho Sir_Psycho's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Don't take this as canon, but I thought that Jovians would have to backup using an ego bridge, rather than a cortical stack. Unless of course they choose to die permanently and don't resleeve (into cloned flats). Although, this doesn't sound feasible to me given the amount of deaths the fall caused and the amount of time and resources it takes to physically supplant a morph across the solar system. Also, there could be Jovian converts, people who were indentured and used synthmorphs until they could finally afford to egocast to Jupiter and sleeve into a "real" body. As to the OP, regarding the idea of a resleeve having no soul, I'm pretty sure most of humanity has taken the "I think therefore I am" philosophy to heart. :D
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Haxar wrote:
I too had the "but you're still dead" thought, while reading the opening fiction. Sava's existence will continue but the original Sava actually died while a new person just like them took their place. Even if Sava had transmitted their ego with the data, they would still be dead, and a copy of their mind would be running around instead. Same goes for people who switch morphs. But if you follow this line of thinking, it starts getting philosophical about the nature of the individual. And also very depressing when playing EP.
Well, I thought most people playing EP would have already gone along this philosophical route... When you get to sleep, you die. The person who wakes up is quite different from the one who fell asleep. At least they are more different than a resleeved character and the original one are. Every second that you live, experience changes you. It is like every second you upload yourself into the future. The idea that the continuity of self is important is just an habit we have. In some case it can be suspended, but forking (like resleeving from a backup) is something we are not used to, therefore we think of it as something wrong. If you find the whole idea depressing, think a bit more about what merging is about : getting back all the memories of a forked copy, exactly like you had lived two lives for a few hours. That can comfort someone that believes that the continuity of the ego is important. Anyway, I think the point of view you present must be prominent among Jovians and that they probably see us infomorphs and resleeved characters are mere ghost and avatars of the machines that led Earth to destruction. Can't blame them for it. That should probably be the biggest cultural war going on in transhumanity, to replace the old-fashioned religion wars.
browwiw browwiw's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Wayfinder wrote:
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul.
That would be 'theologically', not 'philosophically'. The 'soul' is just that song that the brain sings. Thought and personality are extant of the brilliant biochemical material between your ears. If you can record that song and play it on something with higher fidelity, all the better.

"Let’s face it: Most of us are just here to shoot stormtroopers." - Gary M. Sarli

Yogo Ted Yogo Ted's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
browwiw wrote:
Wayfinder wrote:
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul.
That would be 'theologically', not 'philosophically'. The 'soul' is just that song that the brain sings. Thought and personality are extant of the brilliant biochemical material between your ears. If you can record that song and play it on something with higher fidelity, all the better.
It may also be philosophical. Certain philosophies postulate a separate soul without a higher power involved. Of course, to say "philosophically", of "theologically" in either way is too broad to be really correct, since there are too many philosophies and theologies to cover. Personally, the idea of uploading is frightening to me. Continuity of self is everything to me. If you make a copy of my brain and put it in a different body, does the me currently experiencing cease to exist? I know that the new body will believe that the transition is seamless, but how could it tell if it's an exact replica? It's just a little scary to me.
Sir_Psycho Sir_Psycho's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
You're on the right track, then.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Yogo Ted wrote:
It may also be philosophical. Certain philosophies postulate a separate soul without a higher power involved.
Well, I'm partial, but from my point of view, the philosophy branch that seems on the best track is the one who resolved the dualism by giving a name to the "matter" of which the soul is made of : information.
Yogo Ted wrote:
Personally, the idea of uploading is frightening to me. Continuity of self is everything to me. If you make a copy of my brain and put it in a different body, does the me currently experiencing cease to exist?
If you lose a leg and replace it with a prosthesis, does it impair your continuity ? If you lose one neuron (hint : you actually lose a lot more each day) but replace it with an artificial neuron, does it impair continuity ? If we replace 10% of your brain by a functionally equivalent circuit, does it ? How about 49% ? 51% ? 99%? 100% ?
Quote:
I know that the new body will believe that the transition is seamless, but how could it tell if it's an exact replica?
Last night, aliens subdued you and put back in your bed a clone with the exact same memories who awoke this morning. Prove me wrong.
Quote:
It's just a little scary to me.
http://www.sinfest.net/comikaze/comics/2006-06-14.gif It is indeed scary. That is why Jovians are not such bad guys, they have a natural reaction to what happened to the universe.
browwiw browwiw's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Yogo Ted wrote:
It may also be philosophical. Certain philosophies postulate a separate soul without a higher power involved.
No, it would be theological or supernatural. As a thinking culture, we're well past Platonic concepts like the 'soul'. Metaphysical handwaving and woo such as that was a crude place holder until we discovered psychology and neurology. Consciousness is extant and localized to the brain producing it. And the Jovians really are such bad guys. They restrict their citizens from contemporary technology that would ease the suffering and enable to more fully control their individual destinies. The Jovian Junta is not unlike real world regimes and religions that prohibit their citizens and members in third world countries from using contraceptives and other modern forms of healthcare.

"Let’s face it: Most of us are just here to shoot stormtroopers." - Gary M. Sarli

Yogo Ted Yogo Ted's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I'm not saying I have the answer, just that it's frightening to me. And I suppose the concept of soul as a higher motivating power probably isn't part of a rational philosophy, but the concept of continuity of self can be. This is my knee jerk reaction to this concept, after thought I realize that it is just a knee jerk reaction and not probably my well thought out final opinion on the subject, but that said, as a knee jerk reaction it's probably fairly accurate to the way many people would feel. Not all or even most, but many. That said, at the same time the Junta aren't the good guys. They're still a repressive regime. I think one of the things to look at is that being bioconservative isn't necessarily a marker of villainy, just that the major bioconservastive group in EP not very nice.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Yogo Ted wrote:
I'm not saying I have the answer, just that it's frightening to me. And I suppose the concept of soul as a higher motivating power probably isn't part of a rational philosophy, but the concept of continuity of self can be.
Today (in 2009) it is but in 10 AF it is not anymore I would say.
Yogo Ted wrote:
That said, at the same time the Junta aren't the good guys. They're still a repressive regime. I think one of the things to look at is that being bioconservative isn't necessarily a marker of villainy, just that the major bioconservastive group in EP not very nice.
I am not sure I would say the Jovian Republic is so bad when you take their point of view : they see all non-flats as corrupted, as ennemies, mere TITAN-spawns. It is normal they try to keep them out. They see cornucopian machines as a potential terrorist weapon (and, well, it makes more sense than most of today's anti-terrorist laws) and yes, there is a fair amount of corruption/lobbying going but nothing that ever prevented a nation from being called a democracy.
Matrix Matrix's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
browwiw wrote:
As a thinking culture, we're well past Platonic concepts like the 'soul'. Metaphysical handwaving and woo such as that was a crude place holder until we discovered psychology and neurology.
Yeah, [i]right[/i]. Because a scientific explanation is always more convincing than unsubstantiated supernatural -censored- -censored- -censored-. Ahem. So, as I was saying, magical thinking is frustratingly persistent.
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Wayfinder wrote:
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul. What if the real humans showed up to reclaim the Solar System? Might that be an interesting, Twilight Zone twist? And just who are the real humans?
Interestingly, I was tossing part of this around as a core concept for my campaign. Basically, everyone would start out making pre-Fall characters. Bad things inevitably happen. Maybe someone gets out but the vast majority of the PC's end up either infugees or re-instanced. I thought that would be a great way to sort of ease them into the setting. The characters start out in a world much closer to ours and work their way into the EP world. Of course much later on someone would bring back the "originals", who weren't really dead after all. . . or maybe they were and the bad guys made clones with stolen alpha forks and used psychosurgery to give them ten years of fake memories. Then again, the PC's might have been made to think they're the people they claim to be, or had their memories edited, or. . .you get the idea. Add in a few death and resleeves in between and it should be an amusingly mind boggling mess.
Sir_Psycho Sir_Psycho's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Iv wrote:
Yogo Ted wrote:
I'm not saying I have the answer, just that it's frightening to me. And I suppose the concept of soul as a higher motivating power probably isn't part of a rational philosophy, but the concept of continuity of self can be.
Today (in 2009) it is but in 10 AF it is not anymore I would say.
Yogo Ted wrote:
That said, at the same time the Junta aren't the good guys. They're still a repressive regime. I think one of the things to look at is that being bioconservative isn't necessarily a marker of villainy, just that the major bioconservastive group in EP not very nice.
I am not sure I would say the Jovian Republic is so bad when you take their point of view : they see all non-flats as corrupted, as ennemies, mere TITAN-spawns. It is normal they try to keep them out. They see cornucopian machines as a potential terrorist weapon (and, well, it makes more sense than most of today's anti-terrorist laws) and yes, there is a fair amount of corruption/lobbying going but nothing that ever prevented a nation from being called a democracy.
Don't they also make a lot of their money through extortion?
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Sir_Psycho wrote:
Don't they also make a lot of their money through extortion?
Inasmuch as every tax and toll is extortion, sure. The Jovians claim sovereignty over Jupiter and charge for using its resources (gravity). The people who have to pay it find it a small price compared to the risk of losing their cargo to killsats, extortion. The Jovians see it as a reasonable expense for using their natural resources, a valid tax.
Sir_Psycho Sir_Psycho's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
My answer (shortly prior to vaporisation) would be "I'll accept that Jupiter is a Jovian Republic resource when you send one of your unmodified flats down to the surface and erect a flag." Do the hypercorps charge you for orbiting Mars?
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Sir_Psycho wrote:
Do the hypercorps charge you for orbiting Mars?
Please don't give them ideas.
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Sir_Psycho wrote:
My answer (shortly prior to vaporisation) would be "I'll accept that Jupiter is a Jovian Republic resource when you send one of your unmodified flats down to the surface and erect a flag." Do the hypercorps charge you for orbiting Mars?
You think they don't? They probably don't charge for slingshotting around Mars but I bet they do have docking fees which include full records checks if your ship is going to be in orbit for any length of time. As to the question of Junta sovereignty of Jupiter, it lasts because they found the level of antagonism that gets them money without being enough to warrant retaliation. If they were to start blowing up asteroids wholesale, the debate would quickly become more than academic.
Sir_Psycho Sir_Psycho's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Oh, I don't doubt the hypercorps have a giant suitcase on the mesh, an archive full of every tax, levy, tariff, charge, surcharge, fine, fee, required contribution and more. I think the difference is that the hypercorps have a lot to offer in goods and services, entertainment, bread and circuses. A carrot on a stick, the price of admission. The Jovians, more iron-fisted, partly because they don't have much to give. They resort to basing their charges on laughable concepts like the ownership of gravitons and radiowaves, but back it up with killsats and attack ships to make the joke deadly serious.
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I guess I see it as a difference of degree, not kind. Its not that the Jovians are the "good guys" by any stretch so much as they are internally consistent. They're the good guys from their own worldview. Everyone in EP uses a carrot and a stick of some kind, its just a question of the size of each. "This concludes your Firewall orientation briefing. Please decide right now and forever whether or not you want to join. In the event that you decline, please step into the suicide booth provided and your next backup will be promptly activated."
fodigg fodigg's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Wayfinder wrote:
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul.
One of the core conceits of the setting is that your ego is your soul or that the concept of a 'soul' has been debunked--a belief held only by bioconservative flats. That--if there is something more that defines you--it would travel with your ego, even in infomorph, synthetic, or replicant morphs. However, there's no reason why your individual character can't believe otherwise. I think it'd be interesting to run a character who names each of their morphs, altering their identity along with each resleeving. So perhaps if my character were "Fo Diggity (infomorph)" when I first start the game, subsequent resleevings might change my name to:[list] [*]Fo Daniel (ruster) [*]Fo Susan (fury) [*]Fo Takeshi (bouncer) [*]Fo 1-B (synthetic case) [*]etc [/list] One could even perform funeral rites for your past selves, seeing each resleeving as a true rebirth/reincarnation. I don't see why this couldn't even be a common practice/perspective for a segment of the population that embraces transhumanity but still believes in the soul. Or, believes that an individual is defined by the union of soul/mind [i]and[/i] body (ego [i]and[/i] morph), and that resleeving is to become someone else. Edit: The section on religions (p82) seems to cover this a bit, with neo-Hinduism possibly as a source for the attitude I describe above.
-fo diggity
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
fodigg wrote:
Wayfinder wrote:
Philosophically, except for "flats," everyone is dead. If you're playing someone that has been resleeved, you're already dead. You're not even real because you have no soul.
One of the core conceits of the setting is that your ego is your soul or that the concept of a 'soul' has been debunked--a belief held only by bioconservative flats. That--if there is something more that defines you--it would travel with your ego, even in infomorph, synthetic, or replicant morphs.
[/quote] I tend to lean to the latter, if only because the former is asking for trouble. After all, if your ego is your soul, does making an alpha fork create a new soul? Do AGI's (or seed AIs) have souls? These are great areas for exploration but my overall impression is that the society of EP heavily favors keeping a single copy of each person active as a way to avoid tackling those questions. Sort of like how cloning is limited to animals today.
fodigg fodigg's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Zophiel wrote:
I tend to lean to the latter, if only because the former is asking for trouble. After all, if your ego is your soul, does making an alpha fork create a new soul? Do AGI's (or seed AIs) have souls? These are great areas for exploration but my overall impression is that the society of EP heavily favors keeping a single copy of each person active as a way to avoid tackling those questions. Sort of like how cloning is limited to animals today.
Well, to be blunt these questions are only troubling if you believe in a soul. But, assuming you do, then you could say that with every "fork" or "double-sleeving", you are essentially splitting your soul, and that the longer those "pieces" of your soul are apart, the more they grow into two souls as their egos diverge in experience and world-view. Think starfish. Cut up a starfish into pieces and they're pieces. But eventually they'll grow into different starfish. In the setting of [i]EP[/i], with "remerging" tech, you can put that starfish back together before that happens. From a legal point of view, I think all forks/sleevings count as one being. If your fork tries to kill someone you're responsible. That sort of thing. --- Personally I find it more troubling to vat-clone biological bodies without a mind, sleeving multiple egos over that body for the lifetime of the sleeve. Even if you don't believe in souls--hell, maybe even moreso because you don't--that's troubling. I could see a lot of bioconservatives calling that slavery. Even if it's slavery of a body maintained in a vegetative state.
-fo diggity
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I personally took the idea that the Jovians look upon the rest of transhumanity as abominations and ran with it. In my game the Junta are in the center position as outlined in [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_theory] dependancy theory[/url] allowing them to subjugate the rest of transhumanity to an extent. However, as has been pointed out here, there a many differing philosophies regarding sleeving, so there is more than enough disagreement to support a rebellion. I have one player running a Jovian who has adopted the use of a cortical stack but still holds the Jovian philosophy that he has died and this new version is a completely new thing. This reminds of the movie "The Prestige" with Edward Norton's character who constantly dies. Regardless, I feel that a section in the book (or at least a supplement) outlining the predominant "belief systems" regarding this should be present and should be a part of the character creation process.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
fodigg wrote:
Think starfish. Cut up a starfish into pieces and they're pieces. But eventually they'll grow into different starfish. In the setting of [i]EP[/i], with "remerging" tech, you can put that starfish back together before that happens. From a legal point of view, I think all forks/sleevings count as one being. If your fork tries to kill someone you're responsible. That sort of thing.
This is something the GM must account for and may (should) differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. That being said it makes for great gameplay. I have a player who's background includes him going through repetitive forced forking and constantly having to round up these forks and either A) dispose of them, or B) suffer the consequences of their actions. I haven't had him run into a 'good' fork of himself yet though. Could be fun.
Zophiel Zophiel's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
fodigg wrote:
From a legal point of view, I think all forks/sleevings count as one being. If your fork tries to kill someone you're responsible. That sort of thing.
Interestingly, this came up in the legal thread in this forum. It actually highlights the complex leagl fiction that is the new concept of identity. Given that there is no such thing as a soul. Given that you will never have more than one copy of yourself active at a time (for simplicity). Whichever copy is active is legally and culturally considered to be you. We know there may be copies of you, in fact there probably are. As long as you don't revert to one of those copies, you are legally accountable for your actions. You may decide to do something terrifically illegal. Let's take a single ego murder as the example. As soon as you hatch this plan, you quit making backups of yourself. Your most recent backup neither has the plan nor knows anything about it. You work out this rather complex plan, carry it off and shoot yourself in the head and self destruct your cortical stack. Zap! Now "you" are the backup. Depending on the particular legal system, it is entirely possible that this new you will not be criminally culpable. That's reasonable. After all, you never planned to commit a crime, that other guy did. However, you'll still inherit all of his property and rep just as if you had done it (any rep and cash expenditures to work out this murder are still gone). There's a legal continuity of a kind but its more in the manner of inheriting an identity than in a recognition that the backup is exactly the same being as the guy who shot himself in the head. When it comes to multiple simultaneous alpha forks it might get a bit trickier but the precedents above would make a good case against prosecuting forks not directly involved in the crime. On the other hand, multiple alpha forks would share a common legal identity and resource pool, sort of like a married couple only more so. As far as clones. . .I agree that its a bit disturbing. Then again, I find it disturbing that a hypercorp exec is restored from backup again and again when there are infugees waiting in line for a morph. And what about kids? Every child is using resources that someone with a previous claim on life doesn't get. Then again, those infugees are just backup copies of real people. Since birth is totally optional, who's got the better claim there? The closer you look at it, the stickier it gets. That works for me. I've never cared for easy prepackaged morality, regardless of the source.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I think the writers of EP walked (successfully) a fine line in writing a coherent universe where interesting adventures can happen and put an impressive number of safeguards to prevent the universe from being too easily destroyed. (I still think that nano facturing has huge flaws in this domain : cornucopia machines doing copies of themselves every few hours is problematic) However, my experience as an avid SF reader makes me think that it si impossible for such a setting to be totally foolproof. I think it is possible for the players ever stumble on a way to make them overpowerful overnight. Despite the fact that in all plausibility an NPC should have found the idea before them, I'll let them do so and see what interesting things they can do...
ChristianCalvert116 ChristianCalvert116's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I think that perhaps Anyone curious about this line of thought should read the Night's Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton, as it deals with something very similar to this.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I think most of Eclipse Phase's GMs are singularity geeks like I am so are pretty armed for a team of PCs taking off :)
Sepherim Sepherim's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Returning a bit to the origins of the post, I believe this would probably be the basic moral/philosophical/theological debate. But there are a couple things to consider. First, it says in the religion section that old religions fared rather badly with the appearance of morphs. Probably one of the focal reasons (and why hindu religion didn't fall) is that its doctrine didn't allow for a reborn soul to be transmitted to new bodies. So, I'd say people in the EP world have probably already decided mostly that the soul does transmit itself. Probably even way before the Fall. The question on identity is probably more problematic, and this is where I'd imagine most philosophers to be debating. Wether or not two people are or not the same. And it is a great and interesting puzzle. As for the Jovian Junta, I doubt they are evil just because they are a repressive government. From our modern, 1st World, democratic view, that is so. But probably not so much so far in the future. Morals have changed, and they are fighting a war for the nature of True Humanity. And war has always required sacrifices.
collectedcrust collectedcrust's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
The jovian junta is going to play a big part in my game. I imagine most of their population as flats who were fall evacuee or original space colonists who survived the fall and were were swept up into the junta as the last survivors of humanity. There is regulated breeding to replace their numbers, and everyone else is involved in the war effort to preserve humanity. I imagine most of the splicers would be in scientific fields or the military to take advantage of their technological assets, which are a rarity in this society. In my setting if one these assets die and their cortical stacks are recovered they would be offered virtual existence instead of resleeving, since the moral majority rejects sleeving. This virtual brain-trust of infolife would fill the void created by the Junta's avoidance of AI. I was going to make the Jovian Junta somewhat churchy with a desire to save souls thus accepting other transhumans, except uplifts (to far corrupted) or pods (sexless mutant abominations!). I imagine there is a tension between the religions community and the military, over souls and egos. The religious community feeling the souls should be laid to rest. The military wanting to preserve an intellectual assets, setting up simulspace retirement communities (virtual cocktails and rounds of golf between plotting astronomical routes or analyzing tactical solutions),which the church views as a grey area. The military is keeping morally questionable research secret from the church and public, and in my setting has created a corrupted exhuman neurode deep within the military black ops. Liberals feel the independent egos have rights and should be able to write living wills to be resleeved or not. I'm going to play the jovian junta as packed underground warrens, on the verge of a cultural revolution. In my group, in order to infiltrate the jovian junta i think the group will ego cast into a military academy (which accepts foreign diplomat's children). It would be fun to have them in an 11th grade philosophy class debating this question of who is alive. My players would not be able to keep their mouths shut and would very much expose there radical views or start a teenage riot.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I've been thing about this and I came to a different conclusion then "your still dead" theory presented. Personally I think each body has it's own soul which is separate to the mind (or conscience). This is why when someone forks themselves they always diverge (the conscience is the same but the soul is different). Along these same thoughts, the reason people act differently in different morphs has to do with a different soul each time (or lack of a soul if your in a synth). If a morph is killed, that soul is dead but your physical self can still live on, like wise if a morph is resleeved to another conscience, the soul remains the same but the mind changes. This would explain why most people are weary about having someone else sleeve their morph, the mind gets use to that soul and is most identified to it. Since synths lack souls, it further enforces why people avoid them to other morphs. It would be like living in an abandoned warehouse, all cold and uninviting.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Sunchaser Sunchaser's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
I just figured that religions in EP would borrow the idea of gods being able to create avatars of themselves from the Hindu religion (the same yet different) and extend it to transhuman souls. Every copy is just another extension/avatar of a core soul which unites them as the same person. Thus there would never be a loss of continuity (in a supernatural sense) and all copies share equally in a soul's karma or fate. In a positive social sense it encourages people to be responsible for his/her collective actions and calms doubt about continuity. In a negative sense it makes each ego responsible collectively for the good AND the bad no matter what. So I could see this having interesting ramifications on legal systems where it matters.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity wrote:
I've been thing about this and I came to a different conclusion then "your still dead" theory presented. Personally I think each body has it's own soul which is separate to the mind (or conscience). This is why when someone forks themselves they always diverge (the conscience is the same but the soul is different). Along these same thoughts, the reason people act differently in different morphs has to do with a different soul each time (or lack of a soul if your in a synth). If a morph is killed, that soul is dead but your physical self can still live on, like wise if a morph is resleeved to another conscience, the soul remains the same but the mind changes. This would explain why most people are weary about having someone else sleeve their morph, the mind gets use to that soul and is most identified to it. Since synths lack souls, it further enforces why people avoid them to other morphs. It would be like living in an abandoned warehouse, all cold and uninviting.
What happens when one merges, then ? Both dies and a new soul arises ? Where do you draw the line between "conscience" and "soul" ? Informorphs and VR gives rise to the very interesting experiment of giving two identical forks the exact same stimulis. If they end up reacting exactly in the same way (and they most probably will, according to their descriptions), does this invalidate your theory ?
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Iv wrote:
What happens when one merges, then ? Both dies and a new soul arises ? Where do you draw the line between "conscience" and "soul" ? Informorphs and VR gives rise to the very interesting experiment of giving two identical forks the exact same stimulis. If they end up reacting exactly in the same way (and they most probably will, according to their descriptions), does this invalidate your theory ?
Personally I believe that our existence is divided into 4 distinct elements that can interact but are separate. Your physical body which takes up physical space, your mind/conscience which is the collection of your memories and experiences, your soul which is everyone's anchor to the spiritual realm (or afterlife, or whatever you want to call it), and finally your emotions which drive your soul like your mind drives your body. If two consciences are merged then it doesn't effect the soul (as most likely the consciences are infomorphs anyway and as such don't have a soul at that time). In my personal belief, the soul and mind are two very distinct entities, this is why the mind dies with the body but the soul can live on. If I can find it I have an entire Philosophy essay describing my personal beliefs and the evidence that made me come to this belief.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
From my perspective, Eclipse Phase is sci-fi and has its own philosophy which is reflected in its world. All sleeving into a morph does is rebuild the *PHYSICAL* brain exactly as it was upon backup (regular or cortical stack). You have a physical body (morph) and you insert a copy of your physical brain into it. There is no mental or spiritual substance transfered. This relies on the idea that our entire existence is physical, a monist view. Your ego is essentially the result of your physical brain's configuration, not a soul or anything like that. your "mind" or "mental self" is akin to the image on your computer screen. It is the result of a physical entity, not a new type of substance.
Sepherim Sepherim's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Actually, I see no reason to add a "soul" to explain anything in the EP setting. Forks start to evolve differently not because of different "souls" in their bodies, but due to different personal experiences of what they've been doing on the time they've been apart. Your assumption that a "soul" would explain this is also in a certain degree opposed to the maximum religious group of EP, the Hindu, which in turn believe that the same "soul" moves from body to body with each death.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Exactly, there is no soul. In truth there is nothing connecting someone to the result of their backup. There is no explanation available to explain how that would happen outside of a substance dualism which is pretty soundly debunked. Any attempt at rationalizing the existence of souls in EP are mental constructs that act as coping mechanisms for people who can't accept that there is no spiritual world.
Iv Iv's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity wrote:
Personally I believe that our existence is divided into 4 distinct elements that can interact but are separate. Your physical body which takes up physical space, your mind/conscience which is the collection of your memories and experiences, your soul which is everyone's anchor to the spiritual realm (or afterlife, or whatever you want to call it), and finally your emotions which drive your soul like your mind drives your body.
Personally I believe we are divided into 3 distinct part : a blue chicken, a magic corkscrew and a herd of squirrel. I don't wish to sound offensive, but beliefs, while interesting, are not things that are easy to share without them explaining observations.
TBRMInsanity wrote:
If two consciences are merged then it doesn't effect the soul (as most likely the consciences are infomorphs anyway and as such don't have a soul at that time).
Waitamoment. Infomorphs don't have souls ? How come ? A synthetic morph wouldn't have one then ? Basically it is just an informorph driving a vehicle... What about pods ?
TBRMInsanity wrote:
If I can find it I have an entire Philosophy essay describing my personal beliefs and the evidence that made me come to this belief.
I would be interested in the evidences. My current personal belief (backed up with clues but short of hard evidences) is that there is no soul, and that notion of self is mostly an illusion.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Iv wrote:
Personally I believe we are divided into 3 distinct part : a blue chicken, a magic corkscrew and a herd of squirrel. I don't wish to sound offensive, but beliefs, while interesting, are not things that are easy to share without them explaining observations.
I'm not offended. Everyone is entitled to your own belief and opinion. I also don't mind others attacking my belief because I think constant questioning of your own beliefs is what is needed to progress and solidify your beliefs (otherwise your "building your house on the sand", to take the Biblical proverb).
Iv wrote:
Waitamoment. Infomorphs don't have souls ? How come ? A synthetic morph wouldn't have one then ? Basically it is just an informorph driving a vehicle... What about pods ?
No I don't think that synths have souls, as their body doesn't contain life and the anchor needed for a soul to interact with it. Pods are a grey area, they are part biological, but they are also twisted abominations of God (in a way) and as such would be a weak anchor for a soul. Infomorphs are just the mind (no body, soul or emotions, just thought) which is why they are the most alien existence for people to be in.
Iv wrote:
I would be interested in the evidences. My current personal belief (backed up with clues but short of hard evidences) is that there is no soul, and that notion of self is mostly an illusion.
I'll dig around and try to find it for you then. Granted everything I've said is just my personal opinion and not the view of CGL, or the majority of the people playing EP. I agree with the statements above that EP takes the stance that transhumans have no souls (as seen in the game's slogan, "your mind is software, program it"). If you read the works of Ray Kurzweil (one of the influences of EP) he goes on further to say that your identity is a pattern in your mind, and in time that pattern can be copied to a computer and then downloaded into a new body. We are this pattern and not the body that was left behind. As such you can consider yourself "human" while not fitting the current biological definition now.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Thantrax Thantrax's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity : Please do produce that essay. I can't say I agree with your beliefs, but I do find them quite compelling from what I've read thus far. I think they might make a good foundation for a 'Transhuman' religion and would love to develop it into an organization. It could pose a great conflict between the citizens of the Hypercorps and the Hypercorps themselves. The Hypercorps want people to see their bodies as just another asset so would likely be trying to resist this meme. If I do go ahead and use this, do you have a name for your belief? If not, would you like to name it? Sunchaser : I really like this avatar theory. I am woefully undereducated in this area, but like TBRM's posting, it certainly seems like another great cornerstone for a theological approach.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity wrote:
No I don't think that synths have souls, as their body doesn't contain life and the anchor needed for a soul to interact with it. Pods are a grey area, they are part biological, but they are also twisted abominations of God (in a way) and as such would be a weak anchor for a soul. Infomorphs are just the mind (no body, soul or emotions, just thought) which is why they are the most alien existence for people to be in. Granted everything I've said is just my personal opinion and not the view of CGL, or the majority of the people playing EP. I agree with the statements above that EP takes the stance that transhumans have no souls (as seen in the game's slogan, "your mind is software, program it"). If you read the works of Ray Kurzweil (one of the influences of EP) he goes on further to say that your identity is a pattern in your mind, and in time that pattern can be copied to a computer and then downloaded into a new body. We are this pattern and not the body that was left behind. As such you can consider yourself "human" while not fitting the current biological definition now.
That is not even slightly Kurzweil's idea, it is however established epistemological/philosophical/communications theory. It's just a very common idea on identity and how it's formed being presented in a sci-fi book. Something very important you missed. If you understand how computers work you understand that the copy is not the original. Transferring something is not transferring it, it is copying it and deleting the original. Under that idea as well, the person being put in the new body (the original) dies and a new copy of them is born. If you want a novel depiction of the sleeving process look into rudy rucker's "Software", the first book in his ware tetralogy. That has, so far as I am aware of, the only "sleeving" process where the potential for something like a soul exists. Another point you would absolutely need to address to make your theory sound. According to your statements, nobody who is in ANY morph has a soul. This is because ALL biological morphs are abominations as much as or more so, in several cases, than pods. What god would look down at a Novacrab with anything other than disgust (5 points if you said Cthulhu). We, (trans)HUMANS, made them and we made them better than any god EVER did. To address your superstitions regarding a soul. You suggest that the soul is a result of either a biological process, in which case the soul does not carry over, or a physical structure such as a gland (the "anchor"), in which case the soul STILL does not transfer over. You just have an exact copy of your old one (assuming it is in the brain). Assume the anchor scenario where the soul is just made up of some kind of non-physical drifty "soulstuff". If I understand correctly, you seem to believe that something in the body (biological only) acts as an anchor or homing beacon to this "soulstuff". Two problems with this. To act as you seem to suggest it would, this homing beacon would have to exist as a physical thing and at least partly as "soulstuff" but you can't do that. Part of our definition of soulstuff is that it isn't physical, thus necessarily creating the inverse of physical substance (that it is not soulstuff). Also if a person has two acting egos (not the waffles) which one would his soul go to? If you cannot answer these questions I think it may be time for you to reassess the validity of your position. You make these statements and take this position but you fail to establish any foundation for your claims. That's why people are interested in your essay the way they are, they don't want it as support for your statements and their not hoping to find it there. They don't want it as a thought provoking piece of intelligent literature. They want it to use as a fictional religious group who stratify what little is left of mankind into even smaller groups of those they accept or don't accept based on what they "feel" about the existence of a soul. This soul's existence cannot be proven or dis-proven so you essentially have a witch hunt in space. Actually that does sound like the makings of a great evil cult. I think I'll use it. These ideas you put forth are not actually "philosophies" of yours but more feelings or whims. Building a philosophy takes much more effort than that. Please, if you wish to call something philosophy, put some effort into it. Failing this, your statements amount to little more than noise. We all have the ability to reason, I implore you to exercise it.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Thantrax wrote:
TBRMInsanity : Please do produce that essay. I can't say I agree with your beliefs, but I do find them quite compelling from what I've read thus far. I think they might make a good foundation for a 'Transhuman' religion and would love to develop it into an organization. It could pose a great conflict between the citizens of the Hypercorps and the Hypercorps themselves. The Hypercorps want people to see their bodies as just another asset so would likely be trying to resist this meme. If I do go ahead and use this, do you have a name for your belief? If not, would you like to name it? Sunchaser : I really like this avatar theory. I am woefully undereducated in this area, but like TBRM's posting, it certainly seems like another great cornerstone for a theological approach.
I don't really have a name for my personal philosophy, I identify myself as a Christian of no denomination. I was raised in the Church of England but since High School I usually go to services in either the Lutheran (Evangelical) or United Church (basically any Church that doesn't force me to identify myself to a denomination, and allows me to express and develop my own religious beliefs). I guess you could call the philosophy Quadism or Quadist Christianity. In EP my guess is that a more bioconservative group would come up with these ideas (most likely in the Jovian Republic) as they would be the most likely to want to attach additional value to your original body and the soul contained within. It wouldn't surprise me if this would be one of the main ways the Jovian Junta socialize their citizens from doing extensive re-sleeving (and especially allowing others to re-sleeve into their original bodies). This would also mean that the death of a bio morph would have an associated funeral with it as the soul attached to that body would no longer be able to interact with the physical realm. The mind may live on but a part of you would be dead forever. @UpliftedOctopi: I don't mind people using my personal beliefs to create an evil cult. I actually find it flattering that people actually discuss my beliefs (as that is the whole point of religious self discovery). As for Kurzweil, the idea of the conscience as a pattern is laid out in "Age of the Spiritual Machines" (one of Kurzweil's greatest works IMHO). In my belief, the soul is separate from the body all together but can interact with the physical realm through a body and life (as defined as biological life) is the anchor needed for the spiritual realm to interact with the physical realm. This is what makes life (ie biological life) unique and different then chemical reactions, or other physical processes. Another idea I have is that God made us the stewards of creation (it is his creation but since the time of Genesis, the care of the physical realm has been in our hands, and it is up to us to protect and care for it). As stewards of creation we can do anything "godlike" we want and not fear the wrath of God for it (include creating abominations of God like Novacrabs and Pods). As long as the soul can anchor to any biological form, then the spiritual realm can interact with the physical. ------- I need to go though my university archives to find the essay but when I find it I will post it on my website and place a link here for everyone.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Not suggesting that kurzweil's application of existing ideas into sci-fi wasn't original. In fact, I have added him to my (all too large) reading list. Simply suggesting that theory of identity as he seems to be using is not, in the slightest, new. Initially I thought that the idea of using morphs and resleeving would be a huge asset for eclipse phase, and maybe one day it will, but I just can't find it in me to abandon such a complete and solid game system/world as Shadowrun (where things are defined in a complete and useful manner) for a new born that still can't quite walk right, let alone run, like Eclipse Phase. The concept is mind blowing but the grey areas are too predominant. For example, the existence of a soul as we debate it here. There should be no room for this much interpretation. That is what house rules are for. There should be an entire supplement (read:profit) on the process of sleeving, instead we get little more than an outline, hints if you will. I may come back to this system in a few years, when it's had time to grow, but for right now simply that there is room for debates like this make it, to me, an incomplete product. Oh and about the cult. Ideologies like the one you outlined here are the roots of far too many tensions. "you don't have a soul because...." is asking to be hated. You are, from the perspective of the persecuted, dehumanizing them (poor word choice in context but you get the point) it seems a very conceited view of the world, very self centered. I would liken it to the idea that the Earth was the center of the universe in that rather than going out and establishing an objective definition of the term being explored you simply start with "I have a soul" and never prove that statement. Rather than basing conclusions on fact and reason you start with the answer you want and, as your signature says, replace reality with an abstract mental construct of your own.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
UpliftedOctopi wrote:
Oh and about the cult. Ideologies like the one you outlined here are the roots of far too many tensions. "you don't have a soul because...." is asking to be hated. You are, from the perspective of the persecuted, dehumanizing them (poor word choice in context but you get the point) it seems a very conceited view of the world, very self centered. I would liken it to the idea that the Earth was the center of the universe in that rather than going out and establishing an objective definition of the term being explored you simply start with "I have a soul" and never prove that statement. Rather than basing conclusions on fact and reason you start with the answer you want and, as your signature says, replace reality with an abstract mental construct of your own.
Speaking from a purely in game POV, just because your current morph doesn't have a body, doesn't mean are dehumanized. It just means your original body has your original soul and that is why you will feel the most comfortable in it. It also means that since your being is at it's most complete when you have all four parts (Body, Mind, Soul, and Emotions), you will feel the most incomplete when your an infomorph (and are only a Mind). This cult would play up the need for biomorphs and resleeving transhumans (to make them more complete). It would also take a stance on renting out your body to others as you can only truly be whole if your lucky enough to be in your original body (whatever type of biomorph that may be). The core rule book does state that the norm is for people to want biomorphs, and the ideas of renting ones morph out to others, and resleeving into synthmorphs is alien and only done when you have no option. There are groups (Barsoons, Exhumans, Scum) that buck this trend but the majority wouldn't see the cult's ideas as dehumanizing them. That doesn't say they would join, but they wouldn't persecute them.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
UpliftedOctopi UpliftedOctopi's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity wrote:
Speaking from a purely in game POV, just because your current morph doesn't have a body, doesn't mean are dehumanized. It just means your original body has your original soul and that is why you will feel the most comfortable in it. It also means that since your being is at it's most complete when you have all four parts (Body, Mind, Soul, and Emotions), you will feel the most incomplete when your an infomorph (and are only a Mind). This cult would play up the need for biomorphs and resleeving transhumans (to make them more complete). It would also take a stance on renting out your body to others as you can only truly be whole if your lucky enough to be in your original body (whatever type of biomorph that may be). The core rule book does state that the norm is for people to want biomorphs, and the ideas of renting ones morph out to others, and resleeving into synthmorphs is alien and only done when you have no option. There are groups (Barsoons, Exhumans, Scum) that buck this trend but the majority wouldn't see the cult's ideas as dehumanizing them. That doesn't say they would join, but they wouldn't persecute them.
This makes much more sense. My apologies, I seem to have made the assumption (perhaps drawn from use of emotionally charged language such as "abominations" and such) that things without a soul are to be held in lesser regard, rather than seen as disadvantaged. While I still do not understand your quadism, as you refer to it, I do grasp the idea behind your concept of soul (requiring at least dualism of some sort). It is sort of like a source of spiritual power that certain avatars that people adopt (infomorphs, synthmorphs, so on) can not access. You may consider introducing a sort of divine magic class/ability into the game (or maybe just psychic abilities) and use a balance method like shadowrun does, the more human means the more soul which in turn means more magic/power. Another interesting idea to help add much needed depth to an Eclipse Phase game.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
It appears that Psi is a purely Mental phenomenon that may draw power from the soul (due the requirement of a biological body and the long time it takes to resleeve into a new morph). I would totally be in favour of a Shadowrun like house rule that diminishes your Psi abilities depending on how many implants the character has. I would have to go over the implant rules first to see if there is an appropriate way of implementing the house rule.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
King Shere King Shere's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
Steeping into the firestorm with grenades. Its safe to say that misunderstandings and Lable-confusion occur in discussions, Especially with unclear definitions. 1=A (Ox) and 2=B(House) are Two Oxes a house? 1+1=2? A+A=B? In many religions the "spiritual/mythical" soul doesn't remember past experiences while living, The person isn't the same as his souls previous incarnation or future incarnation. since it can be said that the person is the sum of the experiences accumulated. Now, aside from religion bias. I believe that there exists a continues person -and that energy/ data/ discharges would be described as a soul also. Perhaps its currently reside in the discharges of electric synapses. I don' t believe its carried over into a replica. "Fax me up scotty", and the original is shredded. I wouldn't see the world from 2x2 eyes if the original was somehow spared. The original and the fax copy are two sheets of paper Even if they are to an outsider identical down to Molecular/nano/pico level. Ideal solution is of course to somehow transfer the continues "soul" without killing it. But some ideals are not currently possible. Since the "copy" will be a replica of the original. Its a better form of offspring and thus almost as good; as a continued existence. The Forks would be individually separate souls, regardless of its morph. To die while ensuring the offspring's success is not bad. Perhaps in the eventual afterlife "dead" forks would be merged. Forks arriving with desires of reclaiming stuff is interesting. Even if neither is the "original" or human. Lots of potential hilarity ensues. "What sort of joke is this? We have already given it to you" "Aren't you supposed to be on a vacation by now" "Not you again, Take a number and join that crowd (of you)"
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Invasion of the Humans
TBRMInsanity wrote:
Speaking from a purely in game POV, just because your current morph doesn't have a body, doesn't mean are dehumanized. It just means your original body has your original soul and that is why you will feel the most comfortable in it. It also means that since your being is at it's most complete when you have all four parts (Body, Mind, Soul, and Emotions), you will feel the most incomplete when your an infomorph (and are only a Mind). This cult would play up the need for biomorphs and resleeving transhumans (to make them more complete). It would also take a stance on renting out your body to others as you can only truly be whole if your lucky enough to be in your original body (whatever type of biomorph that may be). The core rule book does state that the norm is for people to want biomorphs, and the ideas of renting ones morph out to others, and resleeving into synthmorphs is alien and only done when you have no option. There are groups (Barsoons, Exhumans, Scum) that buck this trend but the majority wouldn't see the cult's ideas as dehumanizing them. That doesn't say they would join, but they wouldn't persecute them.
What about those people who aren't comfortable in their original bodies? Where do their souls reside? Is it at all possible that mind, soul and emotion are, in fact, all one unified concept? Lastly, I think it should be noted that not everyone hates synthmorphs, nor does everyone feel uncomfortable with them. In fact, it seems implied that the attachment that most people have with biomorphs is more one of social acceptance, or something akin to refusing to ride in a car without a leather interior (because it "doesn't feel right"). It does not make synthmorphs "alien".
TBRMInsanity wrote:
It appears that Psi is a purely Mental phenomenon that may draw power from the soul (due the requirement of a biological body and the long time it takes to resleeve into a new morph). I would totally be in favour of a Shadowrun like house rule that diminishes your Psi abilities depending on how many implants the character has. I would have to go over the implant rules first to see if there is an appropriate way of implementing the house rule.
Except that wouldn't really fit well with your theories on the concept of soul. Prior, you stated that a person's soul is tied to their original body, and cannot be transferred or copied... but this wouldn't explain why you can use psi in another body besides your original, or why an alpha fork is just as capable of using psi as the original ego. It also wouldn't explain why an AGI with the Watts-Macleod virus could theoretically use and learn psi abilities, since you seem to imply that AGI do not have souls.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]

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