View previous topic - View next topic |
Author |
Message |
tcaudilllg Dragonmaster
Joined: 20 Jun 2002 Posts: 1731 Location: Cedar Bluff, VA
|
Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2010 7:59 pm Post subject: If we develop the technology... |
[quote] |
|
should the dead be brought back to life?
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
XMark Guitar playin' black mage
Joined: 30 May 2002 Posts: 870 Location: New Westminster, BC, Canada
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 6:11 am Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
Well, there's resuscitation techniques to bring the VERY recently dead back to life. But once the brain has died and started to decompose, I doubt there's anything anyone can do. It would be like trying to turn a hamburger back into a cow.
Maybe you could reanimate the corpse somehow but there's nothing of the original person left and you just have a vegetable/zombie. _________________ Mark Hall
Abstract Productions
I PLAYS THE MUSIC THAT MAKES THE PEOPLES FALL DOWN!
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
Ninkazu Demon Hunter
Joined: 08 Aug 2002 Posts: 945 Location: Location:
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 12:46 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
Indeed. The laws of thermodynamics must be obeyed.
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
tcaudilllg Dragonmaster
Joined: 20 Jun 2002 Posts: 1731 Location: Cedar Bluff, VA
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 4:39 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
So necrosis eliminates the possibility. Even if you did revive the brain's function somehow, the necrotic cells would create infection and a gradual rotting away of the brain.
I wonder if there is a switch somewhere that shifts awareness to another body...?
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
XMark Guitar playin' black mage
Joined: 30 May 2002 Posts: 870 Location: New Westminster, BC, Canada
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 5:05 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
Do you believe in the concept of a soul? I don't know if we're talking supernatural or biological here.
I don't believe in a soul myself. It's kind of silly in movies where two peoples' souls switch and they act like each other (Freaky Friday, etc). Memories are all in the brain. You would have to physically transplant your brain into another person's body to have that effect.
Or, possibly upload your memories into a computer if that technology ever becomes possible. If that upload could be done without losing any data, that could be considered a form of life extension if you could at some point further down the line download your memories into a new body (probably a synthetic one).
That opens up a whole new can of worms about consciousness though. The old "transporter" question. If you copy yourself exactly and destroy the original is it still you?
Personally I'd say yes. Because every cell in your body replaces itself over time anyways. We're all just walking through really slow transporters, so to speak :) _________________ Mark Hall
Abstract Productions
I PLAYS THE MUSIC THAT MAKES THE PEOPLES FALL DOWN!
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
tcaudilllg Dragonmaster
Joined: 20 Jun 2002 Posts: 1731 Location: Cedar Bluff, VA
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 5:38 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
Life is nothing without subjective experience and the ability to recognize it.
Via the principle of relativism, if you die then the world blinks out, because you are not there to prove it exists. The entire purpose of life is subjective experience. There is no other. Relationships with people can enrich subjective experience, but they are a means to an end, not an end in itself.
Never in our lives do we experience a cessation of awareness. When we sleep, we experience a moment of the sounds around us "fading" and then we "warp" to a dream. If the sleep is brief, we simply "warp" to a later point in time, with no knowledge that we were asleep. (in fact, we only "experience" sleep when we dream) Subjectively, subjective experience never ends.
We cannot say that there is not a life beyond this one. It may be that our memories and identity simply die with our body, and our experience transmutes to a new body to learn the world all over again. Of there is also the possibility of eternal recurrence, where we live the same life over and over again as the universe reiterates its history eternally, but I prefer to believe that there are other universes out there.
Still, none of this explains what we actually are, or how we came to be.
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
XMark Guitar playin' black mage
Joined: 30 May 2002 Posts: 870 Location: New Westminster, BC, Canada
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 5:58 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
I like the idea of the universe repeating itself and living my life over again to infinity.
Still, whether I like it or not has no bearing on whether it will actually happen. So far it looks like the universe is just going to keep stretching out until all the stars burn out and everything dies...
Quote: | ...and our experience transmutes to a new body |
Here we're going back to the idea of a soul. The dualistic view that there's some kind of magic ball of energy that follows you around while you're alive and goes somewhere else when you die.
Nobody's ever seen or detected this ball of magical energy, so at this point we can't say that a soul exists. We can't say that it doesn't exist, but the default position on any hypothesis is non-belief until evidence is provided. _________________ Mark Hall
Abstract Productions
I PLAYS THE MUSIC THAT MAKES THE PEOPLES FALL DOWN!
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
XMark Guitar playin' black mage
Joined: 30 May 2002 Posts: 870 Location: New Westminster, BC, Canada
|
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2010 10:43 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
Yeah, I'm going into militant atheist mode again, I gotta stop doing that :)
Back to the original question - if the dead could be brought back to life, should they? Depends entirely on the person. _________________ Mark Hall
Abstract Productions
I PLAYS THE MUSIC THAT MAKES THE PEOPLES FALL DOWN!
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
tcaudilllg Dragonmaster
Joined: 20 Jun 2002 Posts: 1731 Location: Cedar Bluff, VA
|
Posted: Sat May 01, 2010 1:05 am Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
XMark wrote: | Depends entirely on the person. |
And that gets us into the question of what makes a person. If you change a serial killer's brain so that they have a sense of remorse, do you let them go free? If you change a healthy person's brain to inhibit their sense of self-inhibition, do you lock them up?
Thinking about that Amanda Knox girl, the reason they are so harsh on her is because they think she's a psychopath. Worse, they think she drives people to act without inhibition just by being around them. And the worst part is, it may be true.
What makes a person, really?
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
DeveloperX 202192397
Joined: 04 May 2003 Posts: 1626 Location: Decatur, IL, USA
|
Posted: Tue May 04, 2010 8:18 pm Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
..why do fucking retarded discussions get posted on game development forums? ..I swear off topic or not..there should be a line drawn. This is the kind of shit that belongs on those obscure retarded post infested forums.
RPGDX is nothing like it once was, and I fear that it never will be again. _________________ Principal Software Architect
Rambling Indie Games, LLC
See my professional portfolio
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
tcaudilllg Dragonmaster
Joined: 20 Jun 2002 Posts: 1731 Location: Cedar Bluff, VA
|
Posted: Wed May 05, 2010 4:06 am Post subject: |
[quote] |
|
It's in off topic so who cares? No RPGDX probably will not be what it once was because it has no leader. There is no Mandrake figure actively organizing anybody, so there isn't the same kind of momentum that it once had.
|
|
Back to top |
|
|