Is this a serious question? Everything in our society, from laws to social conventions, is based on unified agency.
The consequentialist view of rationality as expressed here seems to be based on the notion of unified agency of people (the notion of a single utility function is only coherent for unified agents).
It’s fine if you don’t want to maintain unified agency, but it’s obviously an important concept for a lot of people. I have not met a single person who truly has abandoned this concept in their life, interactions with others, etc. The conventional view is someone without unified agency has demons to be cast out (“my name is Legion, for we are many.”)
By “agency”, are you referring to physical control of the body? As far as I can tell, the process of “switching” (allowing the tulpa to control the host’s body temporarily) is a very rare process which is a good deal more difficult than just creating a tulpa, and which many people who have tulpas cannot do at all even if they try.
Why would it be considered important to maintain a feeling of unified agency?
Is this a serious question? Everything in our society, from laws to social conventions, is based on unified agency.
The consequentialist view of rationality as expressed here seems to be based on the notion of unified agency of people (the notion of a single utility function is only coherent for unified agents).
It’s fine if you don’t want to maintain unified agency, but it’s obviously an important concept for a lot of people. I have not met a single person who truly has abandoned this concept in their life, interactions with others, etc. The conventional view is someone without unified agency has demons to be cast out (“my name is Legion, for we are many.”)
By “agency”, are you referring to physical control of the body? As far as I can tell, the process of “switching” (allowing the tulpa to control the host’s body temporarily) is a very rare process which is a good deal more difficult than just creating a tulpa, and which many people who have tulpas cannot do at all even if they try.