Sorry about that ridiculous watermark.

  • PenisWenisGenius@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 month ago

    I would be hesitant to get on a teleporter even if they were proven “safe”. It could be possible that from my point of view, that’ll be the last thing I ever see. But from everyone else’s point of view Im alive and I walked out the other end without breaking a sweat. But this is a different instance of “me”. From my point of view, would I be “dead” forever or would I be able to witness myself going out for drinks later that day?

    Maybe it turns out that if you make an exact backup of a brain, reconstruct and restore the biologic equivalent of ram and system registers back to their original state (sort of how operating systems do multitasking), then it all works out. But maybe turning the brain completely off or whatever is enough to put the “system” in an “off” state and when it restarts, it’ll be a new instance. Maybe you don’t remember the part where you stopped existing so it doesn’t matter.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Really makes you wonder if humans had a soul and an afterlife what exactly happens when the last copy of you finally dies naturally.

      Like you go to heaven and meet some version of you that lived for a fifteen minute coffee run, and boy is he missed that from his perspective he died at 19 years old because you just had to beam down and try the new Starbucks drink. All the other teleported yous are there.

      Shit what about your spouse? There could be like 900 of you but only 400 of her. Now you all have to spend eternity together.