Poll: Transhumanism: How Far Would You Take It?

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Heronblade

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Witty Name Here said:
I don't imagine myself willingly getting augmentations, but if I did I don't think I'd be any less human for it so long as my mind remained untouched.

To quote The Major from Hellsing (one of the few times a complete monster has a point)

*after being called a monster* "Wrong. I'm human. There's but one thing which makes us human. One's own will... Don't associate me with a pitiful monster like Alucard who uses blood as a currency of the soul, and has to keep taking in other people to go on living. Don't lump me together with one as feeble as him. So long as I have my own will, should I be reduced to nothing more than a brain floating in a glass jar full of culture fluid, or even memory circuits in a huge supercomputer... I'll STILL be human. Humans are beings of soul, of mind, of will.

Even if he smiles in the guise of a young girl, or if he kneels, full of sentiment, in the guise of a veteran warrior, HE'S STILL A MONSTER. Therefor I do hate him, from the bottom of my heart. I do not approve of Alucard the vampire!"
Yeah, I'm going to have to disagree with his assertion that he is not a monster. But that has much more to do with his actions making Stalin look like a misunderstood playground bully than his cybernetics.
 

Daverson

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Option 6. Having the means to become a greater being at your disposal and not taking would make you no better than the people who refuse get vaccines because "they don't believe in them".

Though.... I'm pretty sure one of the central tenets of transhumanism is that we can't become posthuman. We're inherently human, the best we can ever hope for is human+.

Though, I'm sure some people would argue that at point you aren't you anymore... (we call them "fucking luddites")
 

Char-Nobyl

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Zak757 said:
Realistically, I'd probably just go with #2. It's not so much a matter of lopping off and replacing stuff as it is making what I've already got work much, much better. It'd be overall improvement with no foreseeable downsides to it.

Anyhoo, on 2-5, I guess it sorta depends on how much of the surrounding world is being affected by these choices. If it's just me being being given this choice by some R.O.B, then I go with #2. No sense upgrading myself with stuff that modern technology can't do jack about if something breaks (which limits anything from #3 onward), and that's to say nothing of the target I'll be painting on myself by looking like my autopsy could revolutionize technology across all fronts (#4 and #5).

Adam Johns said:
6 is difficult to imagine. I'd need it explained to me in detail before I opt for it. Who I am now is irrelevant though, I'd be transcending the meat sack, and perhaps meatspace itself. But I would need to know precisely what it entailed first.
Ha! Mate, he described it with the word 'Lovecraftian.' You're not getting more details than that. Having absolutely no idea what you're getting into is basically the secondary job description of every Lovecraft protagonist ever.
 

Char-Nobyl

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TheUsername0131 said:
Heronblade said:
Yeah, there's a bit of a problem with that idea. A backup copy of you is not actually you. It is a new person with the copied memories and personality of someone else.
Is there a meaningful distinction?

Let me put it another way; if you where disintegrated, only to then near-instantaneously be replaced with a matching reproduction. And no one was there to witness the event. Then wouldn?t this new instantiation of ?you? be functionally indistinguishable from the ?original.?

Would an acquaintance, friend, or family member be able to make a meaningful distinction?

Epistemologically, we are only what we remember of ourselves.
Yeah...but that's a problem. You're dead. What remains is someone who looks exactly like you, has all your memories, and is convinced that he is you. But he's not.

Before I go any further, answer me this: what if your hypothetical disintegration didn't happen but, by some fluke, the instantaneous reproduction still happened and there's now a perfect duplicate of you right beside you?
 

Starik20X6

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I'm gonna say Option 2 at the moment, but I can only assume as I get older and my natural systems start failing, and my fear of death instinct starts to kick in more, I'll move up the ladder...
 

TWRule

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TheUsername0131 said:
It was in no way intended to help my presumed agenda, an argument would imply we were having a dispute. There is no dispute between us. That remark was intended to be humorous, by pointing out the fine print. All occupations have their hazards.
I took you to be arguing (or at least taking a stance which implied justifiability through argument) that the potential of this sort of tech was highly useful and desirable, beyond even its possible medical uses; if I misinterpreted then I apologize.

Your questions would require me to disclose my medical history. Something often regarded as private. However you've already answered one of your own questions. You asked, "provided they weren't placed in such a situation." My decision is based on that criteria you've decided on exempting from your question. If others should make that choice out of vanity, or on a whim, then that is their choice.

Should you still be involved, it would be prudent for us to continue this discussion in private messages. This thread is meant for merriment, not for melancholy.
I meant to ask about general reasons, not personal ones - if you'd said that you wanted it mostly for medical reasons before, that would have more than satisfied any personal aspect to my question. As you said, the spirit of this thread is not really aligned with the sort of use you have been talking about - though there is a separate discussion to be had about that elsewhere - instead the prevailing attitude here seems to be that otherwise healthy people would freely choose to undertake any of the above options, and I was curious what motivated that (probably nothing serious at all). I don't think it being someone's choice makes it immune to criticism. But, I suppose you're right that my sort of prodding doesn't belong in a thread where most are in a whimsical mood.
 

TheUsername0131

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Char-Nobyl said:
TheUsername0131 said:
Heronblade said:
Yeah, there's a bit of a problem with that idea. A backup copy of you is not actually you. It is a new person with the copied memories and personality of someone else.
Is there a meaningful distinction?

Let me put it another way; if you where disintegrated, only to then near-instantaneously be replaced with a matching reproduction. And no one was there to witness the event. Then wouldn?t this new instantiation of ?you? be functionally indistinguishable from the ?original.?

Would an acquaintance, friend, or family member be able to make a meaningful distinction?

Epistemologically, we are only what we remember of ourselves.
Yeah...but that's a problem. You're dead. What remains is someone who looks exactly like you, has all your memories, and is convinced that he is you. But he's not.

Before I go any further, answer me this: what if your hypothetical disintegration didn't happen but, by some fluke, the instantaneous reproduction still happened and there's now a perfect duplicate of you right beside you?
I'd call it a collaborator. If it continued, It would be called a Zerg Rush.

Fortunate is the one who escapes the workshops of the Clock Makers without realizing that he is but a clockwork copy of whoever he remembers being. Only to become shocked upon discovering an encampment of other (arguably) equally confused self?s.

"498, 499, 500!"


Confusion leads to anger, anger leads to discussion, discussion leads planning, planning leads to a siege against the biomechanical horror that dragged you away to some 'workshop' where it churns out naive 'escapees.'

Even creepier if the 'first escapee' survives by finding the broken down remains of prior escapees at all the traps and other hazardous obstacles.

*Bonus points if one obstacle requires them to construct makeshift equipment from his/her/its 'predecessors.'

**BONUS POINTS! If they discover this has been going on for more than a few weeks when they stumble upon a landfill of thousands!


It doesn't matter what happens to the candle if its used to light another, if not many more. So long as my will endures, my ambitions persist as a high fidelity reproduction, I'd consider that mission bloody acomplished.

Insofar as each substrate is comparable to or more advanced than the provided variant of human cognitive architecture, then I'll be happy with the results. It's only if each subsequent one was in some way diminished, diluted, damaged in ways counter-productive to my goal, then I would have much to fear.

As for persistence of memory, I'd consider any breaks in ontological inertia as though they were merely road bumps. That's how I deal with that existential horror. Faced with the alternative, it suddenly feels less of a horror and more a minor inconvience.

theluckyjosh said:
Well, /someone/ died.
I'm sure the traditional definition of dying doesn't entail leaving behind a working duplicate/functioning copy/qualified replacement.

theluckyjosh said:
If you're point is "well, no one noticed, so never happened" ... there's a few trees in the forest who might want to have a chat with you.
XD I'm going to have to rememebr that one. That was comedic. You Sir, have stamped a smile on my face.

Poor choice of words on my part. My point was that there is no meaningful distinction. Of course in my case, this perspective is a consequence of my occupation. "...if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail" -Maslow's hammer.

If it was gradual enough, say, a parasite slowly burrowed into your brain, very slowly, whilst secreting suitable compounds so that it would remain beneath your notice, and that as it consumed brain tissue, its exceptionally niche physiology permitted it to instinctively imitate the brain tissue it was consuming, as it was consuming it, and this was occurring very, very slowly. Would you at any stage notice?

[Barring of course some nausea, perhaps subtle changes in mood and appetite.]

Starik20X6 said:
I'm gonna say Option 2 at the moment, but I can only assume as I get older and my natural systems start failing, and my fear of death instinct starts to kick in more, I'll move up the ladder...
Desperation is a great motivator. It drives people to see what was at first the most repugnant, repulsive, most abhorred act as something, more appealing. Never mind how much it opposes one's most deeply held drives and impulses.
 

TheUsername0131

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TWRule said:
TheUsername0131 said:
It was in no way intended to help my presumed agenda, an argument would imply we were having a dispute. There is no dispute between us. That remark was intended to be humorous, by pointing out the fine print. All occupations have their hazards.
I took you to be arguing (or at least taking a stance which implied justifiability through argument) that the potential of this sort of tech was highly useful and desirable, beyond even its possible medical uses; if I misinterpreted then I apologize.

Your questions would require me to disclose my medical history. Something often regarded as private. However you've already answered one of your own questions. You asked, "provided they weren't placed in such a situation." My decision is based on that criteria you've decided on exempting from your question. If others should make that choice out of vanity, or on a whim, then that is their choice.

Should you still be involved, it would be prudent for us to continue this discussion in private messages. This thread is meant for merriment, not for melancholy.
I meant to ask about general reasons, not personal ones - if you'd said that you wanted it mostly for medical reasons before, that would have more than satisfied any personal aspect to my question. As you said, the spirit of this thread is not really aligned with the sort of use you have been talking about - though there is a separate discussion to be had about that elsewhere - instead the prevailing attitude here seems to be that otherwise healthy people would freely choose to undertake any of the above options, and I was curious what motivated that (probably nothing serious at all). I don't think it being someone's choice makes it immune to criticism. But, I suppose you're right that my sort of prodding doesn't belong in a thread where most are in a whimsical mood.

No, it?s my fault. I encourage you to continue to question the ethics, implications and long-term effects of speculative developments.

I?m not trying to go along the ?but think of the children,? line of thought, but playing devil?s advocate in this case is far more constructive then merely glossing over the details.

I am certainly concerned that adolescences, pre-teen, teens, young adults and other dissatisfied youths will try to get health insurance with the intent of engineering an ?accident.? With the goal of getting bio-mechanical and/or cybernetic grafts, implants, augmentation, etc.?

I know how that will end up.
?The injury is too clean a cut to have been an accident. No new limbs for you!?
 

Char-Nobyl

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TheUsername0131 said:
I'd call it a collaborator. If it continued, It would be called a Zerg Rush.
Not my point. You get a bit closer to it after the bizarre quote, though.

TheUsername0131 said:
It doesn't matter what happens to the candle if its used to light another, if not many more. So long as my will endures, my ambitions persist as a high fidelity reproduction, I'd consider that mission bloody acomplished.

Insofar as each substrate is comparable to or more advanced than the provided variant of human cognitive architecture, then I'll be happy with the results. It's only if each subsequent one was in some way diminished, diluted, damaged in ways counter-productive to my goal, then I would have much to fear.
...right, but here's the thing: you're dead. You won't be "happy with the results." You're dead, at least in the initial scenario you proposed.

That leads me to the followup question: if you fail to vanish when your clone is created, then is he 'you' only by your death and disappearance?
 

TheUsername0131

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Mar 1, 2012
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Char-Nobyl said:
Not my point. You get a bit closer to it after the bizarre quote, though.
Bizarre? Well I was aiming for David Lynch type horror. If it's not unsettling, then it isn't being done right. But you gave me points for effort, so I'm getting some satisfaction out of this thread.


Char-Nobyl said:
...right, but here's the thing: you're dead. You won't be "happy with the results." You're dead, at least in the initial scenario you proposed.

That leads me to the followup question: if you fail to vanish when your clone is created, then is he 'you' only by your death and disappearance?
I would be able to play chess by myself more effectively. Also I'll require purchasing an additional toothbrush, bus ticket, and I'll be occupying two bus seats, to the annoyance of other commuters. My food intake would be doubled. Also I'll be developing asynchronous developmental disorders relating to hyper-lateralization of brain function. I shall call it Doppelgänger Dissociation.

You'd think the hairdressing costs would double but no. I'll be able to cut my own hair now.
 

Daniel Ferguson

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Apr 3, 2010
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My hearing is shit. My sight, better but I sometimes have trouble focusing on one image. Going into a bank is hell on my eyes, with the clear screens with lots of lines in them. My ability to gain strength is woeful. I would augment or genetically modify these factors, that and my propensity for substance addiction (not necessarily drugs, just everyday substances like sugar and caffeine, alcohol... I'm wired to be a slave to that stuff).
 

Phantom Kat

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Sep 26, 2012
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3-4 is as far as I'm comfortable with, 5 is as far as I could go beyond that point if there was a strong need for it. Beyond that I wouldn't really consider it "me" as I view both the mind and at least part of the body as a requirement for the "self" though the amount of body I require I am unsure of.

I'm not really scared of death, I just don't want it to happen in the near future.
 

TheUsername0131

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Adam Jensen said:
Too far. I want all humans to be like Dr. Manhattan. Maybe even more awesome.
Did your Bachelor's Degree in Criminal Justice prepare you for a life in a cyberpunk crime thriller?
 

CrystalShadow

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Apr 11, 2009
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Hmm. Option 5 or 6...

Although I'd rather become something without a permanent physical body.

Then again, I'm also kind of nervous about the nature of conscious thought, so it might never get that far...

Full body replacement at the very least seems about right though.
 

Rowan93

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Aug 25, 2011
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All the way to the absolute limit. Eventually. I'd take it slow - spend perhaps a million (subjective or sol-standard) years in a human-ish form.
 

Korolev

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AS FAR AS I CAN, MAN, AS FAR AS I CAN. NO LIMITS! NO REGRETS!

We've always strived to be all that we can be. Transhumannism allows us the opportunity to become all we WANT to be!
 

TallanKhan

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Aug 13, 2009
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I would definatley go for 3, and might stretch that to 4 or even 5 later depending on a number of factors, but give me option 3 and I will sign up tomorrow.