Also, not sure what you're agreeing with, Tir? You mean *current* technology, right? And I don't even know what you mean by "as compared to the application from a human mind."
I was skimming the last pages in this thread ._. (And the thread topic reminds me of a discussion our psych professor brought up as she's into neurology on Immortality via Technology, and yes I mean current technology )
So by skimming, I meant 'I assumed y'all were talking about how technology is being applied as an extension of a person' and then based off a tangent from:
You're using current technological limitations (language is a LOT more complicated than sound, for one thing) to argue a philosophical point.[...]
Oops to me if that was rather out of place!
I don't really know if it was. My point saying that was, because technology changes and generally gets better over time, making an argument of "We can never do this!" on the basis of "You can't show me someone who's done it already!" is absurd. Heavier-than-air flight, landing on the moon, splitting the atom, etc. By that same logic, all of those things were flat out impossible, until they were done. If that's what you were talking about, then sure!
Hammer: I'm not interested in whether consciousness directs action or consciousness comes after action. I just wanna live forever, and I want it to be me that's doing the living, not a clone or a robot that thinks it's me. And frankly, I don't see the connection between "Free will doesn't exist!" and "Therefore the person in a computer that thinks they're you won't be you!" Especially when I agree with that latter statement in some situations and not others*, and I have no thoughts on the former statement, because I don't really care about free will.
*Personally I never held truck with the idea that HOW you arrive at a state has no bearing on WHAT that state is. Sure it holds true with experiments, clean chemistry, and physics equations. But the real world is messy, and reactions, people, places, things, they all hold the imprint of their past and that impacts them, in ways subtle and gross. Even if a state is "A brain-origin mind inside a computer," HOW one got from a brain to that computer has impact on what that mind is, especially from the perspective of the mind-in-the-brain and the mind-in-the-computer. The goal is for them to both be the same mind.
(NO I'm not a dualist, it's just easy language to use to separate the concepts of "Meat substrate" i.e. brain, and the whatever-the-fuck that's typing these words, even if they're intrinsically linked and one derives from the other. Derivations have word labels all the time, that doesn't make them separable things!)