Geez, if that’s the question, then pretty much the entire OP is a distraction.
But, OK. My earlier response to CoffeeStain is relevant here as well. There is a large set of possible future entities that include me in their history, and which subset is “really me” is a judgment each judge makes based on what that judge values most about me, and there simply is no fact of the matter.
That said, if you’re asking what I personally happen to value most about myself… mostly my role in various social networks, I think. If I were confident that some other system could preserve those roles as well as I can, I would be content to be replaced by that system. (Do you really think that’s what the OP is asking about, though? I don’t see it, myself.)
Well, to each his own, of course, and to me this is the interesting question.
.. mostly my role in various social networks, I think. If I were confident that some other system could preserve those roles as well as I can, I would be content to be replaced by that system.
If you’ll excuse me, I’m not going to believe that.
Thinking about this some more, I’m curious… what’s your prior for my statement being true of a randomly chosen person, and what’s your prior for a randomly chosen statement I make about my preferences being true?
what’s your prior for my statement being true of a randomly chosen person
Sufficiently close to zero.
what’s your prior for a randomly chosen statement I make about my preferences being true
Depends on the meaning of “true”. In the meaning of “you believe that at the moment”, my prior is fairly high—that is, I don’t think you’re playing games here. In the meaning of “you will choose that when you will actually have to choose” my prior is noticeably lower—I’m not willing to assume your picture of yourself is correct.
Well, there’s “what’s interesting to me?”, and there’s “what is that person over there trying to express?”
We’re certainly free to prioritize thinking about the former over the latter, but I find it helpful not to confuse one with the other. If you’re just saying that’s what you want to talk about, regardless of what the OP was trying to express, that’s fine.
If you’ll excuse me, I’m not going to believe that.
Geez, if that’s the question, then pretty much the entire OP is a distraction.
But, OK.
My earlier response to CoffeeStain is relevant here as well. There is a large set of possible future entities that include me in their history, and which subset is “really me” is a judgment each judge makes based on what that judge values most about me, and there simply is no fact of the matter.
That said, if you’re asking what I personally happen to value most about myself… mostly my role in various social networks, I think. If I were confident that some other system could preserve those roles as well as I can, I would be content to be replaced by that system. (Do you really think that’s what the OP is asking about, though? I don’t see it, myself.)
Well, to each his own, of course, and to me this is the interesting question.
If you’ll excuse me, I’m not going to believe that.
Thinking about this some more, I’m curious… what’s your prior for my statement being true of a randomly chosen person, and what’s your prior for a randomly chosen statement I make about my preferences being true?
Sufficiently close to zero.
Depends on the meaning of “true”. In the meaning of “you believe that at the moment”, my prior is fairly high—that is, I don’t think you’re playing games here. In the meaning of “you will choose that when you will actually have to choose” my prior is noticeably lower—I’m not willing to assume your picture of yourself is correct.
(nods) cool, that’s what I figured initially, but it seemed worth confirming.
Well, there’s “what’s interesting to me?”, and there’s “what is that person over there trying to express?”
We’re certainly free to prioritize thinking about the former over the latter, but I find it helpful not to confuse one with the other. If you’re just saying that’s what you want to talk about, regardless of what the OP was trying to express, that’s fine.
That’s your perogative, of course.