全脑模拟的体现及其对死亡焦虑的影响

C. Linssen, P. Lemmens
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引用次数: 0

摘要

死亡意识是人类活动背后的核心动力。它们的抽象和符号推理能力使人类对自己有限的生命和即将到来的死亡有了独特的预见。由于这种认识的压倒性性质,我们试图通过各种认知和存在策略来应对随之而来的焦虑。其中一个策略是在一个人的一生中创造一份有意义的遗产,它将比个人更长寿。全脑模拟(WBE)是另一种方法,但它不寻常,因为它在字面上承诺废除死亡。从WBE是可行的前提出发,并将发展到我们可以谈论上传思想的水平,我们探索了在计算基质中所谓的不朽存在的含义:首先是我们的化身,其次是死亡焦虑。我们认为,上传会改变化身的本质,但最终不会废除它。相反,所有大脑的决定性特征是它们与包含它们的身体的重要联系,以及它们与由身体调节的环境的相互作用。在这种情况下,我们讨论了WBE减轻死亡焦虑的潜力的限制:与停止存在的(客观)可能性有关的限制,以及那些源于将身体视为死亡代理的感知的限制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Embodiment in Whole-Brain Emulation and its Implications for Death Anxiety
The awareness of death is a central motivating force behind human activity. Their capacities for abstract and symbolic reasoning give human beings a unique foresight of their finite lifetime and forthcoming demise. Because of the overwhelming nature of this realization, we try to cope with the ensuing anxieties by means of various cognitive and existential strategies. One such strategy is to create a meaningful legacy during one’s lifetime that will outlive the single individual. Whole-brain emulation (WBE) is another approach, but is unusual because of its literal promise to abolish death. Starting from the premise that WBE is feasible and will advance to such a level that we can speak of uploaded minds, we explore the implications of an allegedly immortal existence in a computational substrate: for our embodiment in the first place, and for death anxiety in the second. We argue that uploading would change the nature of, but could ultimately never abolish, embodiment. Instead, the defining characteristic of all brains are their vital links to the bodies that contain them and their interactions with the environment that are mediated by the body. In this light, we discuss the limits of WBE’s potential to mitigate death anxieties: limits related to the (objective) probability of ceasing to exist, but also those that stem from the perception of the body as a proxy for death.
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