What is the chance that some other means are found of simulating your personality without physical access to your brain (preserved or otherwise)?
It probably depends on how faithful a copy you’d be contented with, as well as on how much evidence about you you leave behind (writings, internet posts, other people’s memories, etc. -- lifelogging being the extreme version).
I wouldn’t, because a simulation of me is effectively a copy, and having a copy lying around would not keep me from dying. It’s not like I know a huge number of people would be thrilled at having a simulation of me to interact with (and probably annoy, hehehe). Having a simulation of me while I’m still alive, though, would probably come in handy, so it’s not an idea to which I am opposed. I just don’t see it making anything with a chance of preserving this instance of me redundant.
I believe having a copy of me lying around would keep me from dying.
However, I was referring to processes that might be put into place after a person’s death. To name three, consequences of the simulation hypothesis, personality emulation from recorded sources, or advances in physics allowing observations of past events. Three more: multi world hypothesis, fundamental error in worldview, ongoing extra-terrestral intervention. And the big one, FOOM!
I’m not sure how to cheat death, but I am open to examining options.
What is the chance that some other means are found of simulating your personality without physical access to your brain (preserved or otherwise)?
Would you like to consider the possibility of cryonic preservation / plastination becoming redundant in your estimates?
It probably depends on how faithful a copy you’d be contented with, as well as on how much evidence about you you leave behind (writings, internet posts, other people’s memories, etc. -- lifelogging being the extreme version).
I wouldn’t, because a simulation of me is effectively a copy, and having a copy lying around would not keep me from dying. It’s not like I know a huge number of people would be thrilled at having a simulation of me to interact with (and probably annoy, hehehe). Having a simulation of me while I’m still alive, though, would probably come in handy, so it’s not an idea to which I am opposed. I just don’t see it making anything with a chance of preserving this instance of me redundant.
Every future state of you is a copy.
I believe having a copy of me lying around would keep me from dying.
However, I was referring to processes that might be put into place after a person’s death. To name three, consequences of the simulation hypothesis, personality emulation from recorded sources, or advances in physics allowing observations of past events. Three more: multi world hypothesis, fundamental error in worldview, ongoing extra-terrestral intervention. And the big one, FOOM!
I’m not sure how to cheat death, but I am open to examining options.