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Tato7069 t1_j80ip5q wrote

For what purpose? Who in the world cares if a version of themselves simulated from their DNA lives on in a simulated world after they die?

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pepperoniwassabi t1_j80newx wrote

Your family might want to interact with a virtual version of yourself

The more info you store the more realistic the simulation.

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CaseyTS t1_j81deo2 wrote

A human sharing your DNA is not "you". It's an identical twin. You gotta get into the brain for any "self" to be involved in any way, and the brain is heavily influenced by life experience.

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peregrinkm t1_j81dqsx wrote

They can already do that by combining deepfakes with AI. Encoding DNA into the simulation would just help it to simulate protein and cell growth. That would be extremely high resolution.

The question is: could it ever be conscious?

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CaseyTS t1_j81f7wb wrote

>would it ever be conscious?

With actual computers, that is a hard question and I'm not sure how to answer. But if you could simulate every cell in the human brain, you could definitely produce something that behaves exactly like a person that we'd call conscious - inside and out. There's no fundamental rule that says that matter we build machines out of cannot be conscious. I see consciousness as purely emergent, not primal like a dualist's idea of a soul. As such, I think of it as more of an information phenomenon than a material phenomenon (though, obviously, humans use physics to operate).

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peregrinkm t1_j81fyfh wrote

But would it be aware of itself as a conscious entity, rather than merely mimic the patterns of something that is conscious?

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CaseyTS t1_j829j70 wrote

In the same way that a human is, sure. Consciousness is a product of the behavior of a brain. If the simulation allows the brain to make whatever choices a human would (it would have to have virtual senses or something), then I would say it's the same as human consciousness. I don't see a reason otherwise.

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peregrinkm t1_j82axzr wrote

Clearly there’s something within you that registers sight as an image interpreted by consciousness, but is that any reason why someone should “see” what they see? You experience consciousness, meaning something experiences the sensory stimuli. What is the nature of experience itself?

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Dozygrizly t1_j81l7iy wrote

It's actually pretty hotly debated whether this would be possible, if you're interested check out the debates around things like the blue brain project etc.

Your brain has billions or trillions of synapses. The information being relayed at synapses is not binary (different neurotransmitters have excitatory/inhibitory effects which can even propagate backwards). The effect of the entire nervous system would need to be modelled, as well as the gut microbiome (these all influence it significantly).

Add onto that, say you manage to create a perfect simulation, you essentially just have a brain in a jar. So you now need to simulate an external environment, a lifetimes worth of experiences to allow the simulated brain to plastically develop in response to input (otherwise it's an inert lump of meat essentially). Your simulated brain will not respond accurately without this plastic development.

To simulate a consciousness accurately, you would essentially need to simulate someone's entire life.

I agree that consciousness is emergent, but I don't think we could simulate consciousness as we know it. I believe we could get to some form of consciousness though.

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CaseyTS t1_j829r9r wrote

Sure, but we don't have to use a binary computer to simulate it. We could use an analogue computer or whatever else. That said, I agree that this is outside of any practical application; it's science fiction. But I think that, in principle, there is no difference between a machine brain and a human brain if they do the same things. Of course, any consciousness would have to have an appropriate environment, artificial or not.

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Dozygrizly t1_j8bh5ot wrote

Yea, in my mind it's more of a case of, if we get to the point where we can simulate one brain properly in this fashion, it's essentially useless.

We can simulate the brain of a Lithuanian man who has been addicted to 2CB his entire life. Great. Now that we have done that, we have essentially just recreated a brain that already exists.

What does this fake brain tell us that we don't already know, after studying this man for his entire life to determine all the inputs required to simulate his brain?

We now have one brain. This is useless in an inferential sense for any kind of research - we have a sample of N = 1, meaning we have a case study of a brain that we already have fully mapped without having to expend the resources to simulate it.

Once we have the capabilities to simulate a human brain properly, we wont need to do it (or learn anything substantive from it). This is the argument I most agree with anyway.

I wouldn't be so quick to distinguish between a biological brain and a computerised one, they exist on such different planes that (in my opinion) such broad statements are bold to say the least. I do appreciate your point though.

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OvermoderatedNet t1_j81xqaf wrote

> debates around things like the blue brain project

It would really suck if at the end of the day it turned out there were tasks that silicon and computers literally cannot do and that anything more complex than a slow-motion self-driving delivery bot requires organic brain cells.

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[deleted] t1_j80rs0j wrote

[removed]

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Futurology-ModTeam t1_j80z221 wrote

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> > Black mirror covers this. No thanks


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I_HaveA_Theory OP t1_j80r9an wrote

It's more about simulating relationships, not just yourself. Imagine you're here because some reality before you decided they wanted to simulate their loving relationships, and that included "you" (or your likeness via your DNA). Wouldn't that be meaningful? Especially if you came to realize that's how you got here?

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CaseyTS t1_j81dtby wrote

How would DNA alone let you construct a person? There are a lot of things other than DNA that affect their brain throughout their lifetime.

You're thinking of an identical twin. They are frequently very different (and, yes, frequently similar).

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I_HaveA_Theory OP t1_j81g3lk wrote

The goal would not be to construct the same mind or memories, it would likely be to convey some amount of meaning. Here's an excerpt from the essay which imagines a scenario where we exist in such a simulation:

>an entire history of people before us [...] decided their carefully spun web of love was worth living again. Maybe we don’t share their memories, but they looked like us, loved like us. We are their memorial. They decided – through their love, heartache, and scientific toil – that they would do anything to say “I love you” in a spectacular gesture that transcends universes.

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Tato7069 t1_j819nkg wrote

It would be meaningful to me, not the person that simulated me

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I_HaveA_Theory OP t1_j81jc8z wrote

It could be meaningful for them too, knowing it would be meaningful for you

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stangerlpass t1_j80o5vf wrote

You gotta be a special kind of arrogant to think that even after your death the world still needs your personality

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Artanthos t1_j80udsp wrote

Fortunately, not everyone cares about others opinions.

Some people are capable of independent thought instead of just going along with peer pressure.

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CaseyTS t1_j81eafh wrote

Fortunately, the people who never listen to others' perspectives, by and large, fail and fall into obscurity because they choose not to learn or adapt to perspectives other than their own.

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Artanthos t1_j871flf wrote

There is a difference between listening and having your life dictated by.

There are plenty of wildly successful people who would have been been successful if they had given in to peer pressure or listened to their peers.

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Artanthos t1_j80u5gx wrote

I would.

If a simulated version of myself thinks and feels as if it was me, then it is me from its perspective.

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Tato7069 t1_j819ex1 wrote

So if you were cloned from your DNA and the clone killed someone, that would be the same as you killing someone, from your perspective?

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Artanthos t1_j81beps wrote

No, each version of me would be responsible for their own actions.

To put it another way, if there were 10 copies of me, each would be me from their perspective.

They would each also be unique individuals as they would each begin to diverge from me, and each other, at the moment of their separation.

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Tato7069 t1_j81i6cw wrote

So how is that different than the simulation?

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Artanthos t1_j8710jo wrote

Simulations, downloading into a biological body, many-world theory.

Choose your scenario.

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Tato7069 t1_j871bz7 wrote

In any situation that's still not you... It's a copy of you. Your conscious brain in your current body will never have any awareness of the existence of this copy after you died. It's not a continuation of your consciousness

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Artanthos t1_j87387z wrote

It would be from the copies perspective.

And in the many-worlds scenario, it is 100% indisputably you. A near infinite number of you, each diverging from each other.

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Tato7069 t1_j8761sx wrote

So again... What's the point in creating a copy that thinks it's you? Wtf do you get out of that?

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Artanthos t1_j8bqr9m wrote

Continuation: from the copies perspective they are me and encompass all that I have ever been.

If there are multiple copies then, when I come to a fork in the road, I chose both. No more wondering what happens on the path not chosen.

In more practical terms, in the future there come well be journeys from which there can be no return. I.e., the clones will never have a chance of meeting. Be that separate simulations with no crossover or colony ships headed in different directions. From the copies point of view, each would be the sole version of me.

And point of view is everything.

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CaseyTS t1_j81dhz2 wrote

Sharing your DNA would not accomplish that at all. You're thinking of your brain, not your DNA, and a lot of things other than DNA affect the brain in huge ways.

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Artanthos t1_j871ot0 wrote

A simple DNA sample would be nothing more than an identical twin with an age difference, not a mental copy.

That’s obviously not the end goal.

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Danjou667 t1_j80vz01 wrote

We here in real world cant reach U in other way, u live una a simulation atm...

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Artanthos t1_j80ynar wrote

There is no way to prove you don’t live in a simulation or are not a Boltzmann brain.

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Ok_Kale_2509 t1_j826au5 wrote

May I intrest you in the documentary final fantasy x. It may grant some interesting insight.

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clearlylacking t1_j81l59z wrote

People have the urge to procreate, this is similar Imo. You are just one swab away from immortality, for a one time payment of 999$

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