A possible solution would be to lengthen the time interval, at a guess you could give them a subjective week without worrying about too much personality change, making it more possible for them to successfully write down everything important.
I’m still very worried about the morality of it, as I see it the resetting amounts to mass-murder.
I would. I’d want to do some shorter test runs first though, to get used to the idea, and I’d want to be sure I was in a good mood for the main reset point.
It would probably be good to find a candidate who was enlightened in the buddhist sense, not only because they’d be generally calmer and more stable, but specifically because enlightenment involves confronting the incoherent naïve concept of self and understanding the nature of impermanence. From the enlightened perspective, the peculiar topology of the resetting subjective experience would not be a source of anxiety.
If it was determined that I was the best candidate, I would lose quite a bit of trust in the world. But if I thought it within my abilities to optimize the world an hour at a time, yes, I would volunteer.
Around the age of ten I made a precommitment that if I were ever offered an exchange of personal torment for saving the world, I should take it.
I’m still very worried about the molarity of it, as I see it the resetting amounts to mass-murder.
This is a little bit difficult to gauge. It seems like it should be roughly equivalent to a surgical memory alteration during cryogenic stasis or something like that, since you’re essentially starting the thing right back up again after removing some of the memories. In fact, I don’t see why you can’t just do a memory alteration and bypass the reset altogether, given that it seems desirable to retain some parts of the memory and not others.
I fully agree.
A possible solution would be to lengthen the time interval, at a guess you could give them a subjective week without worrying about too much personality change, making it more possible for them to successfully write down everything important.
I’m still very worried about the morality of it, as I see it the resetting amounts to mass-murder.
Absolutely. We need to add a few liters of solvent to get the concentration down to acceptable molarity.
So do I. I think it’s a hideous immoral idea. Only because the lives of everyone else are in the balance would I consider it.
How about if you get saved at the end of the hour/week, not deleted?
That would be better. And then, after the dust settles, all the copies could be resurrected?
If it was determined that you were the best candidate to be Gandhi-Einstein, would you volunteer?
Only if there were no other alternatives. And yes, that is a selfish sentiment.
I would. I’d want to do some shorter test runs first though, to get used to the idea, and I’d want to be sure I was in a good mood for the main reset point.
It would probably be good to find a candidate who was enlightened in the buddhist sense, not only because they’d be generally calmer and more stable, but specifically because enlightenment involves confronting the incoherent naïve concept of self and understanding the nature of impermanence. From the enlightened perspective, the peculiar topology of the resetting subjective experience would not be a source of anxiety.
I’m not Stuart, but I would.
If it was determined that I was the best candidate, I would lose quite a bit of trust in the world. But if I thought it within my abilities to optimize the world an hour at a time, yes, I would volunteer.
Around the age of ten I made a precommitment that if I were ever offered an exchange of personal torment for saving the world, I should take it.
This is a little bit difficult to gauge. It seems like it should be roughly equivalent to a surgical memory alteration during cryogenic stasis or something like that, since you’re essentially starting the thing right back up again after removing some of the memories. In fact, I don’t see why you can’t just do a memory alteration and bypass the reset altogether, given that it seems desirable to retain some parts of the memory and not others.