Consciousness, brains and the replica problem
Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems
2007-12-10 v1 Neurons and Cognition
Abstract
Although the conscious state is considered an emergent property of the underlying brain activity and thus somehow resides on brain hardware, there is a non-univocal mapping between both. Given a neural hardware, multiple conscious patterns are consistent with it. Here we show, by means of a simple {\em gedankenexperiment} that this has an important logic consequence: any scenario involving the transient shutdown of brain activity leads to the irreversible death of the conscious experience. In a fundamental way, unless the continuous stream of consciousness is guaranteed, the previous self vanishes and is replaced by a new one.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0712.1126,
title = {Consciousness, brains and the replica problem},
author = {Ricard V. Sole},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0712.1126},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
4 pages, 1 figure, preprint