Because I want to avoid bad experiences much more than I want to have good experiences, being dead doesn’t seem like all that bad a deal.
This rejection doesn’t work: if the world of the future changes so that bad experiences don’t happen, and good experiences are better, it’s in your interest to see it. Furthermore, do you prefer your current disposition, or you’d rather it’d change?
I don’t know if I want it to change or not, but that doesn’t seem like something to worry about because I don’t know how to change my disposition and I don’t know how to go about figuring how to change my disposition.
You know what? Someone should just go hunt down CronoDAS and forcibly cryo-suspend him. It’d be doing everyone a favour. He’d get to live in a future where he doesn’t have to be geek-emo, a perceived ‘murder’ would be less shameful than a suicide for his parents and we wouldn’t have the same old hand wringing conversation all the time.
See you on the other side. (Or not, as the case may be.)
On the other hand, “we should (legally) kill this guy so as to save his life” is unethical and I would never do it. But it is a significant question and the kind of reasoning that is relevant to all sorts of situations.
No, I don’t mind at all. As long as you don’t mind that I don’t treat this specific desire of yours with sombre dignity. I do, after all, think a death wish as an alternative to cryonic revival where your mental health can be restored is silly and something to laugh at (and so lower in status and discourage without being actually aggressive.)
This rejection doesn’t work: if the world of the future changes so that bad experiences don’t happen, and good experiences are better, it’s in your interest to see it. Furthermore, do you prefer your current disposition, or you’d rather it’d change?
I don’t know if I want it to change or not, but that doesn’t seem like something to worry about because I don’t know how to change my disposition and I don’t know how to go about figuring how to change my disposition.
You know what? Someone should just go hunt down CronoDAS and forcibly cryo-suspend him. It’d be doing everyone a favour. He’d get to live in a future where he doesn’t have to be geek-emo, a perceived ‘murder’ would be less shameful than a suicide for his parents and we wouldn’t have the same old hand wringing conversation all the time.
See you on the other side. (Or not, as the case may be.)
This post was obviously a joke, but “we should kill this guy so as to avoid social awkwardness” is probably a bad sentiment, revival or no revival.
On the other hand, “we should (legally) kill this guy so as to save his life” is unethical and I would never do it. But it is a significant question and the kind of reasoning that is relevant to all sorts of situations.
Should I stop talking about this here?
No, I don’t mind at all. As long as you don’t mind that I don’t treat this specific desire of yours with sombre dignity. I do, after all, think a death wish as an alternative to cryonic revival where your mental health can be restored is silly and something to laugh at (and so lower in status and discourage without being actually aggressive.)
Well, as long as I’m being funny...
Not to nitpick, but I think wedrifid was implying “ridiculous” rather than “funny”.
;-p