Definitions and explanation of terms
Definitions and explanation of terms
Restoration Definitions:
Restoration of a body's structure:
Restoration of a body's functioning:
Restoration of a body's structure and functioning:
Restoration of a body's physapoint: The restoration of a body's structure and potential functioning at a specific point on its physapath.
Restoration of a body's physamoment: The restoration of a body's structure and functioning for a specific moment in time.
Restoration of a body's physasection: The restoration of a body's structure and functioning for a specific period of time.
Restoration of a body's physapath: The restoration of a body's structure and functioning for the previous life time of the original body.
Restoration of self: The restoration of self can have several meanings. For superimmortality it means the restoration of the ixperiencitness produced by one body being restored in that same body after that one body no longer produced that ixperiencitness because of body death. For many people the restoration of the self means the restoration of a person's consciousness at one point in their life usually toward the end of their life. As a result of the restoration they will continue to have the memories of previous events, persons etc., in their lives at a later date after they have been nonconscious or dead for a period of time.
Restoration of a body's behaviormoment: The restoration of the behavior of a body that was produced at a previous moment in time before the body's death.
Restoration of a body's behaviorsection: The restoration of the behavior of a body that was produced over a previous time period by the body before the body's death.
Restoration of a body's behaviorpath: The restoration of the behavior of a body that was produced over the life time of the body before the body's death.
Restoration of a body's awaremoment: The restoration of the consciousness produced by a body at a previous moment in time by the body before the body's death.
Restoration of a body's awaresection: The restoration of the consciousness produced by a body that was produced over a previous time period by the body before the body's death.
Restoration of a body's awarepath: The restoration of the consciousness produced by a body that was produced over the life time by the body before the body's death.
Restoration predictions are predictions about the behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness given specific and varying physical conditions with the original body after death.
Restoration analogies: Ways of comparing two similar concepts for the purpose of helping in the understanding of experiments, principles, and concepts about after death restorations of structure and functioning in a body.
Restoration arguments: Rational arguments based upon scientific facts, logical reasoning and evidence based on restoration and related experiments.
Restoration experiments: Experiments where a dead body under different physical conditions are restored to life by different scientific processes. The science of superimmortality predicts that one way to do this is by restoring a body to a functioning live state either identically to the way it physically was at a specific time before death or one of the many different ways a functioning live body can be. are experiments changing physical conditions with the original body after death.
Restoration principles: Statements organizing the information about specific types of restoration experiments and arguments into a simple coherent predictive explanatory whole. :are scientific laws that have numerous special predictions and applications predictions are predictions dealing with the behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness when given specific and varying physical conditions with the original body after death.
Restoration questions: Questions concerning the consciousness and ixperiencitness produced by a body after its death, and its eventual structure and functioning restoration.
Subjective experience produced by the restoration process: What you the original experiences before death, while you are dead, and then what you experience on being restored to a live functioning conscious state again.
Identical restoration of structure and functioning refers to restoration of a body to a structure and functioning that is identical to some previously existing structure and functioning that the body produced.
Near identical restoration of structure and functioning refers to restoration of a body to a structure and functioning state where the difference from identical can be as little as the orientation of a single subatomic particle, to billions of small changes that do not change the behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness produced by the body.
Close identical restoration of structure and functioning refers to restoration of a body to a structure and functioning state where the difference from identical or near identical is that the resulting behavior and consciousness are not identical but the ixperiencitness produced by the restored body is still identical to the before restoration state. An example of the difference in the structure and functioning of a person's brain between what they are experiencing now and what they did experience in the past.
Percentage wise identical restoration of structure and functioning refers to restoration of a body to a structure and functioning state where the difference from identical, near identical and close identical structure and functioning is that the resulting behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness produced by the body are no longer identical but the ixperiencitness is percentage wise identical.
Smartphone a mobile phone that performs many of the functions of a computer, typically having a touchscreen interface, internet access, and an operating system capable of running downloaded applications.
Nearly identical restorations:
Ch7.4 Types of nearly identical restoration of structure and functioning:
1. Removal of 1 to n subatomic particles, atoms, or molecules 2. Addition of 1 to n subatomic particles, atoms, or molecules 3. Change in orientation of 1 to n subatomic particles, atoms, or molecules 4. Change in placement of 1 to n subatomic particles, atoms, or molecules 5. A slight to large movement of 1 to n synapses in relation to the neuron it is aligned with 6. Movement of 1 to n synapses from one or more neurons to other neurons 7. Change in the size of of 1 to n synapses 8. Removal of 1 to n synapses 9. Addition of 1 to n synapses 10. Movement of 1 to n neurons 11. Changing the ability of 1 to n neurons in how they function 12. Removal of 1 to n neurons 13. Addition of 1 to n neurons 14. Change in the shape of 1 to n neurons 15. Change in the kind of 1 to n neurons 16. Removal of 1 to n body parts or organs but not the brain 17. Addition of 1 to n body parts or organs but not adding another brain 18. Parallel physapath with a constant “n” units of difference change from that of the originals physapath. 19. Divergent physapath with a constant “n” units of divergent change per time period from that of the originals physapath. 20. Convergent physapath with a constant “n” units of convergent change per time period becoming more like the originals physapath. 21. Varying with a both a diverging and converging “n” units of divergent and convergent change per time period becoming both more and less like the originals physapath. 22. Nearly identical Parallel distance 23. Speed of convergence or divergence closely enough to produce identical behavior for the designated time period