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by persnickety
771 days ago
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Do you consider non-persons have an "I"? I presume you do, because otherwise there wouldn't be anyone to deserve rights. In that case, the question is still valid: how would you convince the non-person "I" that the "I" is dead? (I can see how the original "person I" might be dead after such a change, but it doesn't really make the premise invalid.) |
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Keep in mind, this is all in the context of why I don't find the article compelling. It's because I disagree with one of the fundamental premises of its proposed hypothetical situation, one so fundamental that the thought experiment is dull without it.
I'm not here to change your mind. I'm just explaining why I don't find the thought experiment interesting. Suspension of disbelief about some core thing you believe to be true about the world is fun for the sake of science fiction stories, but it's dull for the sake of philosophical thought experiments.