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[personal profile] ciphergoth
I may not reply to everything in that 159-comment thread but thanks to everyone who participated. I hope people don't mind if I carry on asking for your help in thinking about this. I might post articles on specific areas people raised, but first I thought to ask this: my Google-fu may be failing me. I'd appreciate any links anyone can find to good articles arguing against signing up for cryonics, or pointing out flaws in arguments made for cryosuspension. I don't mean South Park, thanks :-) I'm looking for something that really intends to be persuasive.

thanks again!

Update: here's some I've found If you find any of these articles at all convincing, let me know and I'll point out the problems with them. Update: while I am definitely interested in continuing to read your arguments, I'm really really keen to know about anyone anywhere on the Internet who seems well-informed on the subject and writes arguing against it. Such people seem to be strikingly few and far between, especially on the specific question of the plausibility of recovery. There's a hypothesis here on why that might be, but I'm not sure it's enough to wholly account for it.

Date: 2010-02-11 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] steer.livejournal.com
I am a huge fan or Dennett and mainly side with him on such issues but that siding with is an issue of belief/faith rather than scientific certainty. I'm not sure what you mean by "not really worried about this one" since it seems like it could not be more germaine to the issue of whether cryogenics can work.

The question here is surely "what information do we need to revive my consciousness?" The answer can only realistically be "we currently have no way of knowing." I am certainly willing to believe that my consciousness would arise from the execution of any of a class of sufficiently similar algorithms in any medium. However, this is a belief not a theorem and certainly not "science".

At one extreme it is possible that in a "singularity" kind of way, any currently existing consciousness could be reconstructed in the future by backtracking its effect on the universe at some distant future point (given unimaginable computing power to do so and very precise large scale measurements). At the other extreme it is possible that your precise consciousness relies on subtle quantum effects which would be lost unrecoverably only moments after "death" and not captured by any freezing process. The cryogenic claim (that a frozen brain could be restored to a working consciousness) lies between these extremes -- we have no current scientific way of knowing.

The "killed by bad philosophy" piece is interesting (though I only skimmed it). However, it proceeds from a belief that we can only currently consider as not supported by science -- that the procedure will work (ignoring all the stuff about souls which is something of a distraction to get the reader on side by making the counter-argument appear ridiculous) -- whereas, in fact, we currently have no way of knowing.

Incidentally, all of Hofstatder and Dennett's "The Mind's I" seems to be online (probably illegally). If you've not read it you might enjoy chap 13 (seems to be bad OCR scan).

http://themindi.blogspot.com/2007/02/chapter-13-where-am-i.html

Date: 2010-02-12 11:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciphergoth.livejournal.com
Cryonics, not cryogenics. Cryogenics is a respectable scientific field and they so hate association with cryonics that they wrote anti-cryonics into their by-laws in 1982.

I mean that I'm very confident that mental events supervene onto physical events, and therefore whatever it is that causes us to report consciousness will be retained by any sufficiently accurate simulation. I'm worried not about the philosophical problem of whether any simulation could in principle do the job, but the practical problem of whether you can build such a simulation given only a corpsicle.

"The Mind's I" was a huge influence on me as a boy and what started me off as a Dennett fan. I can't remember who I lent my copy to now, so thanks for the pointer!

Date: 2010-02-12 12:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] steer.livejournal.com
Ooops sorry for the wrong term.

I'm very confident that mental events supervene onto physical events, and therefore whatever it is that causes us to report consciousness will be retained by any sufficiently accurate simulation

Yes -- but that's confidence not science. That's what I'm talking about when I say there's a good reason there's no expert on this. You can be as confident as you like but then it could well be that some extra particle, effect or physical property which cannot be simulated appears.

Incidentally, what gives you such confidence? It's a weird thing to be quite so confident about. I'm completely open minded either way. Do you take the real hardline "Book of einstein's brain" approach?

Either way, the problems are highly interrelated -- because we don't know at all (excluding the "very confident") what properties of a brain are necessary for consciousness we certainly cannot answer questions about how consciousness can be reconstructed.

Date: 2010-02-12 12:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] steer.livejournal.com
Incidentally, don't get me wrong, I'm not mocking the belief that consciousness could be simulated. It's both comforting and plausible but it still remains exactly that, a belief. One can argue all day quite enjoyably about Dennett's "Consciousness ignored" approach versus Penrose's "ooh, it's all weird spooky quantum things which we don't know what they are but ooooooh" versus "it's your eternal soul stupid" -- but it's currently in the realms of philosophic debate not science.

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Paul Crowley

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