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by strogonoff 760 days ago
I would not equate self-awareness with the feeling of being enclosed in some distinct thing called a human body that you can exercise control over. With the latter you are not just self-aware, you are also deconstructing experience into parts according to a particular dualistic approach (“that is my body, this is me”). Such deconstruction may not be required, and whether it is the only or even the best approach to qualifying own being is dubious (some might say you and your body are the same and implicitly treating “you” as “contained in your brain” is a fallacy—from the perspective of natural sciences a good illustration is probably how gut flora changes, non-brain organ transplantation, and such correlate with shifts in your personality).
1 comments

> how gut flora changes, non-brain organ transplantation, and such correlate with shifts in your personality

Well, yeah, but so what? You can have shifts in your personality and still be you. You can be grumpy one day and happy another and still be you. And those changes can be cause by environmental changes far less radical than organ transplants.

The one thing you cannot swap out and still remain you is your brain.

Organ transplantation personality changes are not about happy one day and sad another day.

> The one thing you cannot swap out and still remain you is your brain.

Wrong. You can also not swap out your body and remain yourself.

> You can have shifts in your personality and still be you.

When do you stop being yourself? What makes you yourself? Think about it—it is not an easy question to answer.

> You can also not swap out your body and remain yourself.

Why not? Even taking technological limitations into account, there is almost no part of your body that can't be swapped out even today. People have artificial limbs, artificial hearts, artificial ears. They get lung transplants, kidney transplants, face transplants. Give the technology a few more centuries and I don't see any reason why a complete body swap-out should not be possible.

> it is not an easy question to answer

Indeed. But most people would agree that you can get an organ transplant or an artificial limb or a hearing aid or wear glasses -- or any combination of the above -- and still be you. Not so for a brain transplant.

> Why not?

Want to try it?

> But most people would agree that you can get an organ transplant or an artificial limb or a hearing aid or wear glasses -- or any combination of the above -- and still be you. Not so for a brain transplant.

I do not think that is relevant in any way. Most people also believe in God; that does not make it a compelling claim.