Outline of book the science of superimmortality99
An Introduction to the Science of Superimmortality Outline Possible chapter titles and sub topics
Preface Introduction
1. Basic premise of superimmortality
Analogies for understanding the science of superimmortality, mortalism, superimmortalism, superimmortality Ch1. A fast simple understanding of superimmortality through analogies
1. A short introduction to the science of superimmortality 2. Why the name superimmortality? Why is superimmortality a science 3. Mortalism Immortalism Religious Immortalism Comparison 4. Superimmortalism 5. The argument that mind is the brain, versus the brain produces the mind 6. Not the same person argument: different people can have the same structure and functioning behavior and consciousness. Its just a Replica argument 7. The problem of determining when is a person permanently dead 8. A compound argument why life after death is not possible from a mortalist perspective: 9. Smartphone analogy for not being a dualistic theory 10. Television movie analogy 11. Analogies for each: Televisions, VCRs, movies, radio, computer, experiments, operations, buildings, all physical objects like the body 12. Numerous other analogies that produce something. 13. For you to exist, for yourself, before or after death, you have to be conscious again. For you to exist you have to be conscious 14. Superimmortality shows why and how life after death is possible and increasing so under certain circumstances and less so under other circumstances 15. Some of the reasons why superimmortality is a super form of immortality? 16. The problem of accepting new theories 17. The universe produced a consciousness that you experienced once why not again argument 18. Superimmortality is the skeptical position 19. Why superimmortality is a super form of immortality 20. Not near death experiences
Ch2. I experience the consciousness/ ixperiencitness concept
1. A case of lack of understanding of what produces consciousness
2. The meaning of the ixperiencitness concept
3. Ixperiencitness existence proof
4. Ixperiencitness concept's usefulness for science and technology
5. Ixperiencitness concept's coherence with science
6. A body does not need to be the same person to produce the same consciousness
7. A body does not need to be the same person to produce the same ixperiencitness
8. Its the structure and functioning of the body not the body itself that experiences a conscious event argument
9. Falsifiability of statements about ixperiencitnesses
10. Ixperiencitness is a continuum concept
11. Smartphone/ movie analogy for ixperiencitness
12. The ixpepath produced by a body can be identical to the ixpepath produced by another body
13. The ixperiencitness produced by one body can be identical to the ixperiencitness produced by another body.
14. The ixperiencitness produced by one body can be percentage wise different at different points in the person life
15. The ixperiencitness produced by one body can be more identical to the ixperiencitness produced by another body than the ixperiencitness produced by the same body that is produced at a different point in the life of the same original body
16. Robot enhancement argument
17. Identical structure and functioning produces identical behavior proof
18. Identical structure and functioning produces identical consciousness experimental proof
19. Superimmortality's experimental process of determining the consciousness produced by a conscious body
Ch3. Several fundamental principles of the science of superimmortality and their proofs
1. Superimmortality Principle 3.1: Repeating identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical behavior again in that same body.Identical structure and functioning produces identical behavior argument 2. Superimmortality Principle 3.2: Repeating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical behavior again in that same body. Near identical structure and functioning produces identical behavior argument 3. Superimmortality Principle 3.3: Duplicating identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body, produces identical behavior in that other body. 4. Superimmortality Principle 3.4: Duplicating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body, produces identical behavior in that other body. 5. Superimmortality Principle 3.5: Repeating identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body produces identical consciousness again in that same body. 6. Superimmortality Principle 3.6: Repeating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical consciousness again in that same body. 7. Superimmortality Principle 3.7: Duplicating identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body, produces identical consciousness in that other body. 8. Superimmortality Principle 3.8: Duplicating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body produces identical consciousness in that other body. 9. Superimmortality Principle 3.9: Repeating identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical ixperiencitness again in that same body. 10. Superimmortality Principle 3.10: Repeating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical ixperiencitness again in that same body. 11. Superimmortality Principle 3.11: Repeating closely identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical ixperiencitness again in that same body. 12. Superimmortality Principle 3.11: Duplicating identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body, produces identical ixperiencitness in that other body. 13. Superimmortality Principle 3.12: Duplicating nearly identical structure and functioning, over time, in another body, produces identical ixperiencitness in that other body. 14. Superimmortality Principle 3.14: Duplicating closely identical structure and functioning, over time, in the same body, produces identical ixperiencitness again in that same body.
15. Superimmortality Principle 3.15: Whatever physapath that will produce an awarepath you experience with your current body will produce the same awarepath in another body that you will also experience in exactly the same way. 16. Superimmortality Principle 3.16: Whatever physapath that will produce an awarepath you experience with any material body will produce the same awarepath in another body that you will also experience in exactly the same way. 17. Superimmortality Principle 3.17: Thoughts, feeling, emotions, and other conscious aspects in one person can be felt and known by another person when there is identical to nearly identical functioning over a period of time in both person's bodies. 18. Superimmortality Principle 3.18: There can be identity of parts of a structure and functioning. Since there can be partial identity of structure and functioning produced by two or more bodies there can be identity of parts of a structure and functioning. 19. Superimmortality Principle 3.19: There can be identity of parts of consciousness. Since there is partial identity of consciousness there can be identity of parts of a consciousness. 20. Superimmortality Principle 3.20: There can be identity of parts of a ixperiencitness. Since there can be partial identity of ixperiencitness produced by two or more bodies there can be identity of parts of a ixperiencitness. 21. Superimmortality Principle 3.21: Thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness do not have a unique or absolute place of existence or reference so the same thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness can exist or be produced in many different spacial places 22. Superimmortality Principle 3.22: Thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness do not have a unique or absolute time of reference so the same thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness can exist or be produced in many different time periods 23. Superimmortality Principle 3.23: Thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness are not tied to one specific grouping of matter so the same thoughts, consciousness and ixperiencitness can be produced with many different grouping of matter
24. Superimmortality Principle 3.24: If the structure and functioning of matter produces consciousness then matter has to exist before consciousness and thus consciousness is dependent on matter for its existence. 25. Superimmortality Principle 3.25: Consciousness's understanding of matter is limited because of the limited structure and functioning that can be created by the human brain. The structure and functioning of matter can produce consciousnesses with many different understanding of matter and the universe. 26. Superimmortality Principle 3.26: It might be that the universe wants, in the sense of progressing toward producing, over time, certain specific structures and functionings of matter that produce many different consciousnesses and ixperiencitnesses. The universe is not, or might not be consciously aware of this propensity to produce consciousnesses, but nonetheless will produce conscious beings because of its fundamental physical properties
Ch3+. Divergence and convergence of paths, arguments for variations
Divergence and convergence of paths, experiments arguments, analogies, and principles, concept of variations
1. Convergence and divergence of consciousness, structure and functioning are created by the environment, senses, and quantum mechanical produced random changes 2. At any point in your life many different sensepaths could have been applied to your body rather than the one you actually experienced. 3. The more variations that a person could have experienced in his life then there will be all of these variations that can be produce in another body. 4. Convergence and divergence experiments 5. Defining convergence of physapaths in different bodies 6. Why are the results important 7. What the science of superimmortality predicts 8. One sided convergence 9. Multisided convergence 10. Natural convergence 11. Artificial convergence 12. Convergence at different times and places 13. Actual to potential convergence and divergence 14. Convergence and divergence of behavior --- behaviorpath 15. Divergence and convergence of physapaths Structure and functioning of the body 16. Divergence and convergence of neuropaths. 17. Divergence and convergence of awarepaths --- consciousness 18. Divergence and convergence of ixpepaths--- Ixperiencitness 19. Divergence and convergence of sensepaths. 20. Divergence and convergence of enviropaths. 21. Singular convergence 22. Multiple convergence 23. Does which previous physapath taken to physapath convergence point matter to the result? Does which previous physapath taken to physapath divergence point matter to the result? 24. Some paths of convergence get identical ixperiencitness others do not. 25. Percentage wise convergence of ixperiencitness 26. Aspect convergence only partial convergence of ixperiencitness 27. Different possible paths to convergence 28. Convergence to divergence to convergence etc. 29. Diverging sensepath can produce many different physapath and awarepaths that will still produce the same ixperiencitness and then closely like ixperiencitnesses 30. Smartphone/ movie convergence and divergence analogies 31. Divergence and convergence principles
Ch4. First experiment argument
1. Science's knowledge about consciousness up to now 2. Each man, woman, child, animal, alien being is an experiment into what behavior consciousness and ixperiencitness will be produced by their particular bodies structure and functioning 3. The brain produces consciousness Scientific evidence strongly supports this 4. For you to exist after death you have to be conscious again 5. If you had to predict, given that a certain physapath produced a given awarepath and ixperiencitness the first observed time, what would you predict the exact same structure and functioning would produce again. 6. The first experiment argument. 7. Predictions given the results of the first experiment 8. Smartphone analogy If you had to predict what movie would be produced when the same or a different smartphone functioned exactly the same way it did when it produced this movie to begin with 9. If you had to predict what movie would be produced when the same or a different smartphone functioned exactly the same way it did when it produced this movie to begin with 10. Smartphone analogy for the first experiment with the same smartphone 11. Smartphone analogy for the first experiment with the same smartphone but the structure and or functioning has been modified a little 12. Smartphone analogy for the first experiment with a different smartphone but with identical structure and functioning 13. Smartphone analogy for the first experiment with a different smartphone but with near identical structure and functioning 14. How many variations from the original smartphone's structure and functioning within the near duplicate smartphones will produce the same movie, program, song, information, etc. 15. How long before divergence of behavior of the smartphone duplicate? 16. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning in a different place 17. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning in a different time 18. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning made of different matter 19. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning made in another way 20. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon restoration 21. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon restoration after restoration 22. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon repetitions 23. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon repetition after repetition 24. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon replication 25. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning upon replication after replication 26. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning after divergence and convergence of structure and functioning 27. Prediction with Identical structure and functioning after divergence and convergence of structure and functioning over and over again
Ch5. Identireplicas
1. Identreplica concept identical structure for a point in time 2. Picture of a ball in the air which way was it moving 3. There is a probability of it moving in certain ways if there are clues like it is just leaving a person hand when throwing there ar however many factors that can effect the path the ball will follow like speed gravity wind explosions something hitting it, there are clues to where an Identreplica is progressing to but many different factors can influence it. Internapath momentum path 4. An original body has a structure at each moment in time that is in the process of changing according this structure is not exact because we can ot know the exact position and momentum of a particle at the same time 5. Does this inability to know exactly effect superimmortality principles and predictions? Probabilistic predictions can be made as to what awarepaths and ixperiencitness will be produced 6. Many possible potential physapaths 7. Many possible potential awarepaths 8. A continuing identireplica is called a cidentireplica 9. Cidentireplicas can diverge or stay the same or even diverge and then converge over and over again when it does diverge it is called a videntireplica 10.
Ch6. Repetition of structure and functioning experiments, arguments, principles, and analogies
1. Definitions of repetition of structure and functioning, behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness 2. Repetition of structure and functioning experiments and arguments. 3. What repetition experiments are and show 4. Repeating the structure and functioning repeats the behavior consciousness and ixperiencitness 5. If death is final, is every moment non repeatable in the same body? What would it require for this to be physically true? 6. If a consciousness is repeatable with the same ixperiencitness, does this show that the specific matter in a specific orientation is not important for the specific consciousness and ixperiencitness being produced 7. What other processes besides the structure and functioning process will produce the same behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness in the same body? 8. Repetition analogy principle for songs, production of TVs tv shows etc. 9. Inexact repetition of structure and functioning in the same body 10. Diverging repetition from inexact structure and functioning in the same body 11. Numerous repetitions of structure and functioning in the same body. Does this effect the ixperiencitness produced by each body? 12. Repetition of very different structures and functionings (still human) in the same body 13. Repetition principles for the same body 14. Repetition principle for consciousness in the same body 15. Repetition principle for ixperiencitness in the same body 16. Repetitions of structure and functioning in another body 17. Smartphone analogy to repetition experiments 18. Repetition principles
Ch6+. Transference of self predictions, arguments, principles. analogies
Ch7Restoration experiments, arguments, principles, comparisons, and analogies
1. There are multiple kinds of restorations experiments and arguments 2. Restoration related terms and definitions. 3. Restoration after death with identical structure and functioning of the original body. 4. Types of nearly identical restoration of structure and functioning: parallel, divergent, convergent, varying, parallel distance, speed of convergence or divergence closely enough to produce identical behavior for the designated time period 5. Restoration after death with nearly identical structure and functioning of the original body. 6. Restoration after death with identical structure and functioning with decreasing amounts of the original's body's matter used. 7. Restoration after death with nearly identical structure and functioning with decreasing amounts of the original's body's matter used. 8. Restoration after death with identical structure and functioning with increasing amounts of time between death and the restoration of the original's body. 9. Restoration after death with nearly identical structure and functioning with increasing amounts of time between death and the restoration of the original's body. 10. Restoration after death with identical structure and functioning and with increasing amounts of degradation of the original's body 11. Restoration after death with nearly identical structure and functioning and with increasing amounts of degradation of the originals body 12. Restoration after death with identical structure and functioning of the brain 13. Restoration after death with nearly identical structure and functioning of the brain 14. Restoration after death of a previous point in the original's or your life 15. Restoration after death of the original with some of the original matter but it is only in the restored body for a short time. 16. Multiple body restorations using a percentage of the original's body's matter in each additional or proceeding body 17. Sequential Multiple body restorations using matter from each preceding in the sequence original's body's matter in each proceeding body. 18. Multiple body restorations using none of the original's body's matter in each proceeding body
Ch8 . Restoration experiments, arguments, principles, comparisons, and analogies continued
1. The concept of you somehow being energy and upon death that energy is lost into space and time. Is this scientific? How would you restore this energy to the body? How does this energy get placed into a body to begin with? Is this some supernatural energy? Why does it flow out into the universe after death? 2. Restoration of structure and functioning without producing continuity of consciousness slightly different memories, skill, knowledge, etc., 3. Restoration of structure and functioning without producing continuousness of consciousness 4. Enhanced structure and functioning of the body restorations 5. Degraded structure and functioning of the body restorations 6. Divergent body restorations based on how the brain could have been structured and then function. 7. Restoration of the structure and functioning of a different person in the original's body. 8. Restoration from a potential future structure and functioning that would or could have happened if the person had not died 9. Restoration from a divergent potential future structure and functioning that would have happened if the person had not died 10. Partial electronic neuron replacement restoration 11. Total electronic neuron replacement restoration 12. Different processes of restoration with the same resulting structure and functioning 13. Combinations of different kinds of restorations 14. Is there anything like a non restorable object that would have produced again the same result. Something can be too complex to restore, no knowledge to restore, no desire to restore it 15. Restoration principles of behavior 16. Restoration principles of consciousness 17. Restoration principles of ixperiencitness
Ch9. Replication experiments, arguments, principles and their analogies
1. What a replication of a conscious body experiment is? 2. What replication experiments are supposed to show? 3. Identical replication of consciousness producing bodies cidentireplicas 4. Near identical replication near videntireplicas 5. Replications with variable changes at the present time 6. Replications in the past 7. Replications in the future 8. Replications after restoration 9. Replications after the reconfiguration of structure of the body 10. Replications after reconfiguration of the physapath producing the same awarepath or ixperiencitness 11. Replications with recombinations of awareparts
Ch10. Replication experiments, arguments etc., con.
1. Replications with multiple bodies divisions and recombinations 2. Replications with multiple bodies repeating the same physapath at the same time (concept of multiplicity) 3. Replications with multiple bodies repeating the same physapath offset in time (concept of time offset multiplicity) 4. Replications with multiple bodies repeating a physapath within desired tolerances (concept of multiplicity with physapaths within tolerances) 5. Replications and intercommunication 6. Replications with cumulative knowledge 7. Replications after previous different human physapaths have been produced by the body 8. Replications with previous different awarepaths produced by the body 9. Replications with previous different sensepaths experienced by the body 10. Replications with previous different enviropaths effecting the body 11. Replications with variations in ixperiencitness or ixpepath produced by the body 12. Replications with physapath truncations (like death) 13. Replications with potential extensions to actual human physapaths
Ch11. Replication principles of behaviorpath, consciousness, ixperiencitness,
1. Replication principles of behaviorpath 2. Replication principles of consciousness 3. Replication principles of ixperiencitness
Ch12. Predictability arguments for superimmortality
1. What is scientific predictability? regularity 2. Superimmortality predicts that identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness. 3. Superimmortality predicts that closely identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness. 4. Superimmortality predicts that identical and closely identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness in a different body made of different matter in a different place and time. 5. Mapping predictability physapath to awarepaths, physapaths to ixperiencitness there is no mapping for supernaturalist or mortalists. For the mortalists there is just one to one mapping from one physapath to one ixperiencitness 6. Restoration predictions for behavior from the mortalists position 7. Restoration predictions for consciousness from the mortalists position 8. Restoration predictions for ixperiencitness from the mortalists position 9. Repetitions predictions for behavior from the mortalists position 10. Replications predictions for behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness from the mortalists position 11. Replications predictions for consciousness from the mortalists position 12. Replications predictions for ixperiencitness from the mortalists position 13. Smartphone analogy for predictability from the mortalist position 14. Smartphone analogy for predictability from the religious immortalist position
Ch13. Explainability arguments for superimmortality
1. The importance of good scientific explanations for understanding, coherence, predictability, technology 2. Superimmortality explains why identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness in the same body. 3. Superimmortality explains why closely identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness in the same body. 4. Superimmortality explains why identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness in a different body. 5. Superimmortality explains why closely identical structure and functioning produce identical behavior, consciousness and ixperiencitness in a different body. 6. Mortalists have few explanations when their theory is based on the belief that death is final. They have to redefine death as when you never consciously exist again and not on the death of the body. 7. Supernaturalist have few explanations based on reality. There is no evidence of souls existing. No way to detect souls or learn about them. No theory of how souls interact with bodies, Why souls have to interact with bodies? How souls choose a body or visa versa? 8. Smartphone analogy for explainability for superimmortality 9. Smartphone analogy for religious immortality not being explainable 10. Smartphone analogy for mortalism not being explainable
C14. comparison for superimmortality
1. Superimmortality is based on experiments thus it is experimentally falsifiable. 2. One experiment does not prove all of the principles of superimmortality false 3. How is religious immortality falsifiable? 4. How is mortalism falsifiable? 5. Smartphone analogy for falsifiability 6. What is a simpler scientific theory? 7. Why is superimmortality simpler than the theories of mortalism and religious immortality. Other theories are incomplete or need supernatural entities without explaining anything about them based on evidence. 8. Smartphone analogy for simplicity 9.
Ch15. Technological usefulness of the science of superimmortality
1. Understanding how to produce specific consciousnesses with specific ixperiencitnesses after death or even before death. 2. Mapping physapaths to awarepaths to ixperiencitnesses ixpepaths 3. Mapping epipaths to physipaths, physapaths, awarepaths, and ixperiencitnesses 4. Mortalists do not believe it is possible to control or even have life after death. Supernaturalists think it is possible but have no understanding or control over the supernatural aspects of life after death like souls, gods, hells, etc. 5. Random production of conscious argument: If enough random consciousness are produced then the likelihood of any particular ixperiencitness being produced is increased. In other words you do not need to make a specific physapath to produce a specific ixperiencitness If the information is lost or can not be known about your body's structure and functioning or someone else that has lived in the past 6. Fairness of the Random production of conscious argument: This also increases the fairness of conscious existence over time because no particular ixperiencitness will dominate. If the process is random. It also increases the likelihood of people treating each other better because your ixperiencitness might be the one suffering the bad environment or bad treatment by others. 7. How is religious immortality technologically useful? 8. How is mortalism technologically useful? 9. Smartphone analogy for superimmortality being technologically useful 10. Smartphone analogy for religious immortality not being technologically useful 11. Smartphone analogy for mortalism not being technologically useful
Ch16. Arguments for superimmortality
1. Why superimmortality is a science 2. Interchange of matter experiments 3. Interchange of matter arguments, 4. Interchange of matter analogies, 5. Interchange of matter principles 6. Change of matter experiments arguments 7. Change of matter arguments 8. Change of matter analogies, 9. Change of matter principles 10. Speed of assimilation of matter experiments 11. Speed of assimilation of matter arguments, 12. Speed of assimilation of matter analogies, 13. Speed of assimilation of matter principles 14. Blink of an eye experiments 15. Blink of an eye arguments 16. Blink of an eye analogies 17. Blink of an eye principles :Any amount of time can pass
Ch17. Arguments for superimmortality continued
1. The properties argument for superimmortality 2. Proof of the enumerability principle for physipaths physapaths and awarepaths produce the same ixperiencitness. 3. Propagating your genes versus propagating your ixperiencitness concept, experiments, and argument 4. If nature produced you --- your ixperiencitness once why can't it do it again? argument 5. Identification argument for ixperiencitness 6. Identical knowledge argument a cidentireplica has identical knowledge to the original 7. Identical aspects argument skills ability language memories etc. 8. Experiments with many identical copies 9. Experiments asking questions about about a person's consciousness to get information about their consciousness 10. Close duplicate experiments asking questions about a person's consciousness 11. Changing questions to identical copies (cidentireplicas) at different point in their lives 12. Personal identity versus conscious identity argument 13. Personal identity versus ixperiencitness identity argument 14. Diverging structure and functioning copies asking questions, seeing deeper into what they think and feel from different perspectives 15. The same body with continuity of consciousness can change slowly to a structure and functioning that produce an entirely different personality, memories skills etc., 16. Not the same person argument --- can ot have the same ixperiencitness because it is not the same person 17. I do not experience it argument --- you are not supposed to experience a different enough structure and functioning 18. Memories and other attributes produced without life time experiences experiments and arguments 19. If it is not the structure and functioning of the body/brain that produces the ixperiencitness and variation in it, what is the process? How does it work? 20. How does a body producing the same structure and functioning thus the same behavior know not to ever produce this particular ixperiencitness again? 21. If ixperiencitness is part of consciousness then identical consciousness has the same ixperiencitness. 22. Replacement of neurons with electronic neurons experiments and argument 23. Time travel experiments and arguments change sensepath or create a version of yourself in another time period 24. Space travel experiments and arguments change sensepath or create a version of yourself at another place in space
Ch18. Further arguments for superimmortality
1. Counting argument There is enough variation in just structure and functioning of the brain to correspond to the different consciousness that can exist for humans. We do not need to add variations caused by changes in space, matter, and time.
2. Limit argument for the size of smallest change in structure and functioning that will produce a change in consciousness and ixperiencitnesses
3. Principle of countability of physapath and awarepath We can count, or give upper and lower limits to the number of different physipaths in a physicontinuum with limits on size and complexity and the corresponding awarepaths if and when we have enough knowledge.
4. Pigeon hole principle if there are n possible consciousnesses and n +1 consciousness bodies one of the bodies will share the same consciousness. If there are more possible physical structures/functionings than there are possible consciousness some have to overlap so some functionings and structures will have the same consciousness. If there are more total physipaths than awarepaths there has to be some total physipaths that produce the same awarepath.
5. Idoriginal argument The idoriginal argument is that there can be two identically functioning originals that were produced in the exactly same way at two different places and made of different matter? What will be their consciousness and what is the reason that they would have different consciousness?
6. Exchange of neurons argument also several bodies exchanging neurons argument
We can imagine the gradual replacement of neurons between an original and cidentireplicas. We can do this is a number of different ways through time, space, and using different matter. If the functioning and structure stays the same but the consciousness does not there has to be a point where the consciousness is different. If replacement produces a different consciousness we can re-replace
7. Nothing there or nothing left argument When we look at the brain of a person and then take away all the aspects of that brain that produce consciousness there is nothing left to specifically tie a particular mind to a body. Since there is nothing left it has to be one of the properties of matter that we took away. So it can be replaced by replacing the parts sort of like the restoration argument but in a
philosophical way. It counters the anti replica argument.
8. Divergence then convergence argument If the functioning of the brain diverges in functioning then converges back to the same functioning it will have produce the same consciousness. This happens on a cyclic fashion in the brain when we have the functioning during the day as certain types of activity reoccur and the functioning of the brain Imagine taking one physipath and making it exactly like another physipath what will happen to the awarepath will it converge into the other persons?
9. Divergence then convergence of structure and functioning argument
10. Convergence of the structure and functioning of two or more bodies, will their consciousness converge?
11. Convergence of the structure and functioning of two or more bodies, will their ixperiencitness converge also?
Ch19. Supporting arguments for superimmortality
1. Matter is magical argument 2. We are not forgotten experiments and arguments 3. Seeing your loved one's after death argument for superimmortality 4. Creating your loved ones again after their deaths, periodically 5. Creating you, your friends and loved ones again after your and their deaths 6. Creating a cidentireplica of you, to experience your friends and loved ones again after their deaths 7. Creating you at different points in your life meeting your friends and loved ones again at different points in their lives 8. Creating you at different points in your life meeting your potential friends and loved ones, that have never existed before, at different points in their lives. 9. All potential physapaths producing awarepaths with loved ones
Ch20. Multiplicity of the ixperiencitness versus the singularity of the body and, or soul
1. The difference between singularity and multiplicity of self 2. There are enumerable number of different conscious versions of you or other originals 3. There can be any number of copies of each version of you at any one time 4. There are an enumerable number of enhanced conscious versions of you or other originals. 5. Multiplicity can add to omnipotency, omniscience, omnibenevolence, and omnipresence Multiplicity of many different bodies producing the same ixperiencitness means that together they have a greater ability to get things done know things and be in many different places at one time. Power and ability to do and get things done, the ability to know, the ability to be every where. When you have all of these abilities then you have a greater ability to do positive things, 6. The potential multiple production of different bodies producing one ixperiencitness makes us not less but much more in the scheme of things 7. Any part of any sensepath can be applied to any part of any physapath producing an endless number of different awarepaths with the same ixperiencitness. 8. Any part of any human sensepath can be applied to any part of your current body's physapath.
Ch21. Change and application of different sensepaths and enviropaths
1. Explain the concept of the sensepath: the sensual input to
the body from the senses
2. Explain the concept of the enviropath: the effect the environment has on the physapath produce by a body
3. Possible types of sensepaths different physical body, different home, different family and friends etc., different looks of friends and family, different memories,
4. Possible types of senses
5. Senses organs of different animals connected to conscious beings humans by being in their bodies
6. Possible sources of sensepath input computers other physapath awarepaducers
7. Application of a sensepath starting at any point on a physapath
8. Possible sensepaths: from different kinds of non human bodies, from any human body with any set of abilities,
Ch22. Fusion and fission experiments and arguments
1. Define fission and fusion. fusion of conscious bodies is combining of the matter in the bodies. fission is the breaking up of a body into parts 2. Fission of identical bodies producing identical physapaths awarepaths and ixperiencitnesses 3. Multiple brain part fission 4. Non predictability of other theories for fission and fusion 5. What happens when parts of two different identical cidentireplicas bodies are fused when they do not have identical ixperiencitnesses? 6. Fusion after fission 7. Fission and fusion many different times with different bodies 8. If the body is what is important then fission and fusion will not produce identical ixperiencitnesses 9. Smartphone analogy for fusion and fission experiments 10. Can bodies with different consciousness but the same ixperiencitness be fused? 11. At a point where there is divergence of physapaths where there are two identical bodies half of which can from two identical bodies which one takes the ixperiencitness neither one both or one but why this way. Superimmortality says that they split and recombination they had the same ixperiencitness after the split and recombination they still have the same identical ixperiencitness 12. Can there be splitting and recombination when there is not identity in the two bodies to begin with? Yes in many different ways do all of the nerves in the brain have to connect up exactly no axion can be slightly smaller or larger the synapse can be a little larger or smaller etc. Within each side there can be differences that will not effect the total functioning of the brain or will not for a while 13. Smartphone/ movie analogy for fusion and fission of smartphones still producing the same movie etc. 14. Fission and fusion without identity of physapaths producing a different behavior consciousness but maybe the same ixperiencitness 15. Random functioning after splitting and recombination then restoring to the original states of functioning random behavior no consciousness or ixperiencitness being produced will this destroy the ixperiencitness upon recombination?
No identical ixperiencitnesses to begin with
Ch23.
Ch24. What is enough evidence for superimmortality?
1. What is enough evidence for there being an extension of the conscious self after death in the same body?
2. What is enough evidence for there being an extension of the conscious self after death in another body?
3. What is enough evidence for there being many different lives that you can experience potentially experience in a different body?
4. What is enough evidence for there being more than one conscious version of you existing at any one time?
5. What is enough evidence that your consciousness can be enhanced?
6. What is enough evidence that your ixperiencitness can be enhanced?
7. What is enough evidence for there being the existence of
actual awarepaducers?
8. What is enough evidence for there being the existence of actual awarepaducers producing consciousness that you experience?
9. What is enough evidence for there being actual awarepaducers that can create different realities?
10. What is enough evidence for the principles of superimmortality to also apply to conscious animals?
11. What is enough evidence for desired physapath thus awarepath modification?
12. What is enough evidence for believing that you can see your dead loved ones, friends, etc., before and after your death?
13. What is enough evidence for believing that potential physapaths thus potential awarepaths can actually come into existence?
14. What is enough evidence for believing that physapath can be mapped to awarepaths?
15. What is enough evidence for believing that consciousness and ixperiencitness can be produced electronically?
16. What is enough evidence for believing that conscious beings can have knowledge about awarepaths physapaths etc.
17. Smartphone/ movie analogy for enough evidence
Ch25. Potential versus actual distinction
1. Potential versus actual distinction 2. Actual/ potential distinction 3. Actual/ potential smartphone/song analogy 4. Potential structure---identireplica, potential functioning--- videntireplicas, potential physapaths 5. Potential physapaths when they become actual produce actual awarepaths, ixperiencitnesses, and ixpepaths. 6. Potential physipaths map to potential physapaths which map to potential awarepaths which map to ixperiencitnesses 7. Types of actual physapaths, awarepaths, and ixpepaths 8. Types of potential physapaths, awarepaths, and ixpepaths 9. Actual/ potential epipaths 10. Actual/ potential sensepaths 11. Actual/ potential enviropaths 12. Actual/ potential ixperiencitneses 13. Actual/ potential ixpepaths 14. Actual/ potential friends, families, memories ability skills spoken languages etc., 15. Actual/ potential Smartphone /movie, TVs/ movies, radio/ song music, computers /computer games
Ch26. Self convinced of being the original argument
1. What does it mean to think that you are the original. 2. If the original believes he is the original all cidentireplicas will believe the same thing. 3. If the original believes that he is the original many near identical videntireplicas will believe they are the original also. 4. The original can be convinced he is not the actual original 5. The original may not actually be the first original physapath or awarepath 6. Experiments 7. Waking up in another body 8. What evidence would convince the original or cidentireplica he was not the original? Different environment different people different loved ones friends different spoken language, 9. His present environment is different from what he remembers his past to be Different environment different people different loved ones, friends, different spoken language, 10. His ixperiencitness is different how would he know this 11. What if the cidentireplica does not think that he is the original. Does the original think that he is the original? 12. Self convinced of having the same ixperiencitness as the original or being a version of the original 13. The original can't tell the difference either experiments 14. The original can't tell the difference either arguments 15. The original can't tell the difference either analogies 16. The original can't tell the difference either principles 17. Cidentireplicas and near videntireplicas being self convinced of actually being the original argument 18. The original can't tell the difference either experiments and arguments Self convinced of being the original argument The duplicate will think that he is the original argument-s. Because he will have memories of the events that the original had experienced in his life. He will also know all the people that the original knows 19. Smartphone movie analogy: person inside a movie will not know what smart phone produced him.
Ch27. Types of Awarepaducers and the possible awarepaths that they can produce
1. Possible versus actual physapaths, awarepaths, behaviorpaths and sensepaths. 2. Computer generated sensepaths making new realities 3. Different ixperiencitnesses within an awarepaducer. 4. The awarepaducer having one or more ixperiencitnesses itself 5. Biological awarepaducers 6. Bio electronic awarepaducers 7. Electronic awarepaducers 8. Flex electronic awarepaducers where the actual physapaths can be exactly understood and then modified. 9. Interconnective awarepaducers: physapaths within the awarepaducer communicate with each other in their created realities 10. Productive awarepaducers, problem solving etc awarepaducer construction, exploration of space, exploration of consciousness, how to make specific desired awarepaths, 11. Awarepaducers producing the awarepaths of family members and friends 12. Awarepaducers producing sensepaths with family members and friends in them but not their actual awarepaths and ixperiencitnesses 13. Awarepaducers producing the sensepaths or awarepaths of brand new family members with memories of each other love etc., 14. Awarepaducers producing the sensepaths of your life but with better memories. 15. Smartphone/ movie analogy for awarepaducers
Ch28. Awarepaducers and modified reality
1. Many more modified reality awarepaths with the same ixperiencitness 2. Illogical irrational realities 3. Magical realities 4. Enhanced sensepaths 5. Alien realities from human body and conscious perspectives 6. Divergent planet life 7. Living in outer space realities 8. Divergent body types 9. God like powers: predictions, knowledge, control, power, strength, health, flight, magic, underwater swimming traveling in out space with out a space ship or space suit, 10. Instantaneous travel 11. Time travel sensepath 12. Knowledge and control of enjoyment and pleasure 13. Creation of new types of enjoyment 14. Creation of new types of knowledge 15. Modification, in the same waysas above, of other conscious beings lives 16. Living conscious alien lives 17. Completion of goals 18. Illegal or immoral experiences created by the sensepaths within awarepaducers that do not involve or effect other conscious beings at all of if it does it does not effect them in negative ways 19. Smartphone/ movie analogy for modified reality There are any number of logically and physically impossible movies that can be produced
Ch29. Mapping of the different types of paths to each other
1. What is mapping? 2. Why is mapping important 3. Uses of mapping 4. Knowledge mapping to awarepaths physapaths ixpepaths 5. Knowledge storage and generation 6. Computer internet phone (iPhone) mapping analogy mapping the structure and functioning of the iphone that produces a song to the song 7. Mapping physipaths to physapaths 8. Mapping physapaths to awarepaths 9. Mapping awarepaths to ixperiencitness 10. Mapping awarepaths to ixpepaths 11. Mapping epipaths to ixpepaths etc., 12. Mapping epipaths to one ixperiencitnesses 13. Mapping physapaths to ixperiencitnesses 14. Gives conscious beings something to do, it seems, forever almost 15. Smartphone/ movie analogy for mapping structure and functioning of a smart phone to a movie
Ch30. Problems with other theories of consciousness and immortality
1. Possible actual and and potential theories of consciousness and ixperiencitness
2. Soul theory No scientific evidence that a soul or other supernatural entities exist.
3. Reincarnation No known physical or even supernatural process for reincarnation. Evidence for reincarnation is supposedly based on knowledge of past lives. Usually shown to be bogus According to superimmortality if the brain is structured correctly it can have memories of other lives ones that have existed and others that have not. It can also be that some peoples brain are such that they are more liely to believe that they have had past lives and are more susceptible to modify to actually having these types of memories
4. Resurrection has to have the same body not based on the structure and functioning of the body, still needs souls and gods and other supernatural entites. There is not way to tell souls apart or to study them scientifically any speculation about souls can ot be tested
5. Death is final mortalist view based on the belief that for life to exist after death there has to be some supernatural entities like souls to cary the unique me from one body to the next.
6. The non explanatory power of the mortalist position, given the belief that once you die you will never experience anything ever again. There could be many modification to this position depending on the answers given to the many different structure and functioning questions and how it related to ixperiencitness.
7. Not simple
8. Not technologically useful
9. Poor at predictions
10. Poor at explanations,
11. Not scientifically based
12. Not logically coherent
13. Smartphone/ movie analogy for problems with other theories never play the same movie again never the same character in another movie etc, there has to be some supernatural entities transporting between smartphones for there to be the same character in another movie
Ch31. Consequences of the understanding and use of the science of superimmortality
1. Many possible conscious versions of you at once
2. Many possible conscious versions of you throughout space and time
3. Many possible conscious versions of you throughout space and time knowing about the principles of the science of superimmortality.
4. Many possible conscious versions of you through out space and time knowing about the principles of the science of superimmortality and how to apply them to making the conscious versions that it wants to exist
5. Finishing a too short life in the same body in a different body
6. Repeating a conscious life in the same body in a different body
7. Extending a conscious life in the same body in a different body
8. Enhancing a conscious life in the same body in a different body
9. Experiencing other versions of yourself
10. Making a life better by removing, bad, painful etc., parts and sections especially if they have been actually produced before, why do you need to repeat them. Also if the actual experiences produced a better eventual structure and functioning then why not make the final structure and functioning without all of the actualexperienced pain and suffering?
11. Many potential awarepaths, that can be made actual, that are experiencing loved ones, friends, etc.
12. Many potential sensepaths can be applied to a physapath producing many different awarepaths
13. Repeating desired experiences
14. Reuniting with loved one
15. Smartphone/ movie analogy for positive and desired modification to movies by modifying the smartphone structure and functioning
16. Even more enhanced version of you than normal versions
17. Many caring enhanced versions of you
18. Many caring enhanced versions of you that understand the consequences of superimmortality
19. Many conscious versions of you that care about perpetuating your ixperiencitness even if they do not care about repeating or extending this present particular version of you
20. More fair, caring, just universe, more meaning and purpose to each life
21. Just because at any one point in time not every ixperiencitness grouping has had a even amount of actual good awarepaths in comparison with other ixperiencitness grouping of awarepaths does not mean that this comparison cannot be come more fair in time.
Ch32. Enhancements of bodies, physapaths, awarepaths, sensepaths, enviropaths, epipaths, ixperiencitness, and ixpepaths,
1. Types of physical enhancements 2. Types of mental enhancements 3. There are more enhanced versions of you than non enhanced versions of you. 4. Enhanced versions of you are more likely to have the ability to produce other versions of themselves because of increase skills, abilities, knowledge, understanding 5. Enhanced versions of you can help produced other versions of you 6. Enhanced versions of you can be the protectors advocates, creators, recreators, modifiers of your ixperiencitness. 7. Enhancement of understanding. The enhancing the ability to learn. The enhancement of ability to understand 8. Enhancement awareness of surroundings and reality 9. Enhancement of skills 10. Enhancement of consciousness 11. Enhancement of enjoyment 12. Enhancement of pleasurable events 13. Enhancement of math skills and understanding, 14. Enhancement of language and communication skills 15. Enhancement of understanding other's consciousness and ixperiencitness 16. Enhancement of physical abilities and body 17. Enhancement of the body to travel through space 18. Enhancement of the body to live on different worlds 19. Enhancement of the body to live in outer space 20. Enhancement without changing the ixperiencitness 21. Enhancement experiments and arguments. 22. Enhancement of the ixperiencitness 23. What would be an enhancement of ixperiencitness? 24. Enhancement of understanding of the self and one's ixperiencitness 25. Smartphone/ movie analogy for smartphone enhancements and thus movie enhancements 26. Summation of enhancement principles
Ch33. Progressive awarepaths
1. What is a progressive awarepath progressing toward one or more goals like understanding or abilities fulfilling these goals moving on to other goals 2. Progressive awarepath are produced by progressive physapaths 3. Extending progressive awarepaths 4. Enhanced progressive awarepaths 5. Repeating progressive awarepaths 6. Repeating progressive awarepaths with undesired portions removed or replaced with desired sections 7. Extending progressive awarepaths with the same ixperiencitness in other bodies 8. Another reason for purpose and meaning to create progressive awarepaths and enhanced progressive awarepaths with your and other's ixperiencitness 9. What is a progressive ixperiencitness 10. How is a progressive awarepath produced? – by way of creating progressive physapaths 11. Progressive awarepaths produced by progressive producing awarepaducers 12. Potential progressive physapaths and awarepaths 13. Levels of society: hunter gathers, to pyramid builders, to rome to great Britain to modern times to post modern times and superimmortality. Each level has era appropriate awarepaths but they can still have a progressing ixperiencitnesses These are the types of awarepaths that can exist in these times or eras. 14. A level of society where most people believe in the ideas from superimmortality. Is this possible with human physapaths? 15. Progressive smartphone analogy smart phone keeps getting better and better
Ch34. Electronically produced consciousness and ixperiencitnesses --- isoidentireplicas
1. Definition of the term isoidentireplica
2. Neuron replacement experiments with electronic neurons
3. Electric neurons can be more easily manipulated externally so the conscious can be manipulated or studied.
4. Different consciousness and behavior with a possible same or human ixperiencitness
5. The principles that apply to human consciousness and ixperiencitness bioidentireplicas also apply to isoidentireplicas
6. First experiment argument for isoidentireplicas
7. Restoration principles for isoidentireplicas
8. Repetition principles for isoidentireplicas
9. Replication principles for isoidentireplicas
10. Same type of experiments as used for bioidentireplicas
11. Same type of analogies as used for bioidentireplicas
12. Isoidentireplicas can be used for experiments with fidentireplicas, musidentireplicas, insidentireplicas etc.,
13. How do we determine if an isoidentireplica is conscious through experimentation
• Create the same structure and functioning as is created in a human that we know is conscious
• See if the functioning that is the equivalent to the humans functioning will stay the same over a period of time with the same equivalent sensepath an enviropath
• Observe the behavior produced by the isoidentireplica. Does he think that he is a person? Does he think that he is this particular person that he is copied from? Does he have all of the skills abilities, memories, etc., that the original has?
• His behavior can be observed by applying different sensepaths, asking different questions etc.
14. How do we determine if an isoidentireplica has an ixperiencitness through experimentation?
• Does this being isoidentireplica believe that he has had a previous life
• What evidence does he have for this belief
• He has memories of past events people that he has meet, information that he has learned, places that he has been, etc.,
• Do nearly identical isoidentireplicas have the same beliefs and knowledge
• Can there be potential or actual isoidentireplicas that actually experience these remembered experiences etc.,
• Without controlled divergence of the physapath does the being still act like he has an ixperiencitness
• Do all non controlled diverging physapath produce behaviorpaths that seem to imply the isoidentireplica having an ixperiencitness
Ch35. Importance and uses of Isoidentireplicas
1. Electronic brain awarepaducers 2. The ability to solve problems that humans or other biological life forms can not. 3. Can be enhanced or repaired easier, in certain ways, than biological life forms can be 4. The potential ability to create consciousnesses with human ixperiencitnesses that human bodies or other biological life forms can not. 5. The potential ability to create percentage wise identical human ixperiencitnesses that biological life forms can not. 6. The potential ability to create ixperiencitnesses that biological life forms can not 7. The ability to create and run biological life form type of awarepaducers. 8. The ability to know what consciousness and ixperiencitnesses are being produced by the biological brains in the awarepaducer. 9. Can be integrated with non conscious computer like devices to help in accomplishing many different tasks 10. They can increase the likelihood of specific human ixperiencitnesses being produced 11. They can increase the likelihood of human ixperiencitnesses being produced endlessly into the future. 12. If electronic conscious life forms can have human ixperiencitness or enhanced human ixperiencitnesses they are less likely to kill off the human race because they will be part of the humankind. And humans will be less likely to want to fight with them also. 13. Space exploration and colonization with electronic versions of humans or enhanced human ixperiencitnesses 14. Existing in space itself around sun using planets and moons for matter to create awarepaducers 15. The ability to live in outer space without a space ship or space suit and still be able to produce with their own bodies consciousness and ixperiencitness 16. The creators and up keepers of human awarepaducers in outer space
Ch36. Epipaths and the need for knowledge
1. Define the epipath concept 2. Smartphone/song, TV, movie, analogy for epipaths 3. Types of epipaths 4. Construction epipaths how to construct physapaths with the result of producing desired awarepaths and ixperiencitnesses. Production epipaths how to produce a specific body with a specific structure and functioning over time consciousness awarepath or ixperiencitness. 5. Epipath song iphone / TV movie analogy for production 6. Epiphyapath knowledge about a specific physapath 7. Epiawarepath knowledge about a specific awarepath 8. Epixpepath knowledge about a specific ixperiencitnes or ixpepath 9. Continuums of epipaths 10. Why to accomplish a specific goal all knowledge about accomplishing the goal is not necessary. 11. Ways of duplicating an ixperiencitness with limited knowledge. 12. Why it take less knowledge to produce ixperiencitness than a consciousness. 13. Extrapolating and approximating knowledge 14. Experimentation with self observation 15. Experimentation without self observation 16. Smartphone/ movie analogy for smartphone and movie epipaths there are many different ways to reperesnt the movie and the structure and functioning of the smartphone
Ch37. Mutual use experiments and arguments
1. Switching of brain parts experiments: What happens to the ixperiencitness and consciousness when there are several different brains producing exactly the same structure and functioning. 2. When parts of the brain are connected in different ways what happens to the ixperiencitness? If they have the same ixperiencitness to begin with they should continue to produce the same ixperiencitness if they continue to function the same way over time. 3. The structure connecting the parts of the brain will change but the parts of the brain themselves will by design continue to function identical they are connected to devices so that they can say what they are experiencing their behavior will be the same by definition. if there is no possibility of life after death then all of them have to be producing the a different ixperiencitness what happens to the recombined parts will they produce the original ixperiencitnesses or new ones. Each time you do it you have a new set of ixperiencitnesses but they will be producing identical consciousnesses and behaviors 4. The brain uses the same neuron to do more that one use in the brain. The neuron 5. Mutual use awarepaducers 6. Mutual use smartphones/ movie analogy
Ch38. Insidentireplicas
1. Definition of insidentireplicas 2. Existence proofs for insidentireplicas 3. Principle of insidentireplicas: a physasection that is produced within a larger more complex physapath 4. Will sub physapaths within physapaths producing sub awarepaths within awarepaths 5. The reason why the concept is important. 6. Principle of insidentireplicas: a physasection that is produced within a larger more complex physapath will still produce the the corresponding awaresection that it would have produced if it was not part of a larger physapath, even though this physasection is part of a larger more complex physapath that produces a different awarepath. 7. Physapaths within physapaths producing awarepath within awarepaths 8. Smartphones/ movie analogy for insidentireplicas
Ch39. The concept of continuums
1. Defining the concept of continuums 2. Different types of continuums 3. Multidimensional mathematical continuums 4. Continuums of physipaths 5. Continuums of physapaths 6. Continuums of awarepaths 7. Continuums of ixpepaths 8. Continuums of epipaths 9. Extrapolation and approximation of continuums 10. Mapping continuums 11. Field continuums are a two to many dimensional epistemological field where a body's structure and functioning changes in any direction it moves within the field. This field can be mapped to a awarepath based field continuum where any direction produces change in the consciousness produced 12. Smartphone/ movie analogy for continuums there are numerous ways of producing a movie slightly differently 13. Smartphone/ movie analogy for continuums there are numerous ways of producing a movie slightly differently and then putting these movies in a continuum form and then putting the information about the movies in different forms forming multicontinuums for both the movie and structure and functioning of the smartphone that produce the different movies
Ch40. Increasing the probability of the same ixperiencitness existing again argument. Increasing the probability of you consciously existing again after death argument
1. Astronomy related arguments 2. Our universe is extremely large, it will exist for a long time it will produce energy for a long time 3. There is lots of space and matter in this universe 4. The universe is long lasting 5. Many stars for energy for long periods of time. 6. Many planets, comets, astroid and dust around each star for the matter needed for creating conscious life. 7. Possibly infinite universe, within a possible much larger infinite multiverse. 8. There might be other universes within the multiverse with different physical laws that can still produce a specific ixperiencitness in different ways. 9. Chemistry related arguments 10. A needed variety of elements around each star. 11. Many different elements are stable for many years being able to combine into long lasting complex molecules like DNA. 12. Many different structures and functionings of matter will produce the same ixperiencitnesses. 13. Many different bodies throughout space and time can produce the same ixperiencitness. 14. Don't need continuousness or continuity of the same of different bodies to produce the same ixperiencitness. 15. Don't need continuousness or continuity of the same consciousness to produce the same ixperiencitness. 16. Do not need the same memories or other aspects to produce a consciousness that you experience. 17. Different bodies can have different forms of amnesia and still have or produce the same ixperiencitness 18. Different types of bodies fitting different environments can produce the same ixperiencitness 19. Electronic type bodies that can exist in outer space without a need like humans do for air, water, food the right temperature. 20. The possibility of many different awarepaducers producing many different consciousnesses with the same ixperiencitness. 21. The possibility of many different awarepaducers producing many different consciousnesses with randomly produced ixperiencitness. 22. Since the random process of nature produced a consciousness you experienced once it could do it again. 23. Alien conscious being could produce a consciousness you could experience. 24. Increasing probability arguments increasing the probability that nature will produce the same ixperiencitness 25. Smartphone/ movie analogy for increasing the probability of a character existing again in a movie or the same movie being played again
Ch41. Animals and superimmortality
1. The many of the principles that apply to humans also apply to conscious animals. 2. Being a conscious animal does not mean that you have an ixperiencitness like a human's. 3. But animals can be grouped into a ixperiencitness like grouping of awarenesses 4. What is the proof of this 5. Experiments showing superimmortality principles apply to animals 6. People have no souls. Animals have no souls but they can have ixperiencitnesses that can tie them together so that death is not necessarily permanent for them. 7. The simpler the physapath that produces an ixperiencitness the more likely that ixperiencitness will be produced again naturally . 8. Killing an animal is usually better than having it suffer a lot because other conscious versions of them can have better lives in other bodies. 9. It is a much better world when conscious animals are much more than a single body they are multiple. Their ixperiencitness is not permanently destroyed upon death 10. What ever an animal was in terms of awareness in its life it can experience that life again with the identical to near identical structure and functioning 11. There are a number of different versions of an animal's awareness that if they are recreated by recreating the corresponding structures and functioning will produce and awareness that the original animals can experience in another body 12. Point your loved pet animal can exist again after death either randomly by nature, in an awarepaducer with you, in reality with you or a version of you, a version of your pet in reality with you or a version of you, 13. The many different versions of you can have many different pets 14. There can be many different types of pets that could be genetically modified to be good pets 15. There can be even more different kinds of pets that can be produced in an awarepaducer that can not exist in reality like flying dragons, magical unicorns, intelligent friendly talking mice dogs horses catsetc. 16. Smartphone/ movie analogy for animals like an actor in many different movies the movie is simpler so it is easier to make and more likely to exist
Ch42. Near death experiences, miracles, Déjà vu, cryonics
etc. 1. The term déjà vu is French and means, literally, "already seen." Those who have experienced the feeling describe it as an overwhelming sense of familiarity with something that shouldn't be familiar at all. 2. Déjà vu memories of past lives arguments 3. Is the Déjà vu feeling evidence of past lives? 4. How do you explain déjà vu with superimmortality? 5. Explanations of near death experiences not contradicting superimmortality. 6. If the same structure and functioning of the brain is repeated then the same near death experience will be duplicated as well. 7. Within an awarepaducer experiencing and creating miracles, supernatural events, etc. that are not possible in reality is possible. 8. How do you explain near death experiences with superimmortality? 9. Ayahuasca is an entheogenic brew made out of Banisteriopsis caapi vine and other ingredients. It produces near death like experiences. DMT --- dimethyltryptamine is a naturally occurring drug can cause near death experiences then near death experience can be caused by drugs in the brain and likely is. 10. Near death experience are related to the religion that a person believes in 11. Cryonics does not save some innate or souls like part of a person. It at best will give an approximate structure of the brain at death, if freezing of the brain did not destroy the structure 12. Information-theoretic death is perspective driven when a brain does not point to a specific structure upon restoration 13. How do you explain the fact that we do not experience going to or experiencing all of these other versions of yourself when you are unconscious if superimmortality is true? 14. What is a real miracle? 15. Experiences of miracles produced by sensepaths. 16. Smartphone/ movie analogy for near death experiences Déjà vu memories etc.
Ch43. Supermorality and Superethics
1. Definitions of Supermorality and Superethics are morality and ethics when morality and ethics are based on an understanding of the science of superimmortality 2. Reason for morals survival, reproduction, avoiding pain and suffering, entertainment, adventure, 3. Endless suffering 4. Fairness of judgement 5. Death penalty is not so bad if death is not singular and final 6. Killing is not so bad if death is not singular and final 7. Death might still be final for some to all ixperiencitnesses 8. When is suffering worse than death? When there is a real possibility of experiencing another better life in another body 9. Many different potential suffering awarepaths exist for each ixperiencitness 10. Many different potential desirable awarepaths exist for each ixperiencitness 11. Undesirable parts of an awarepath can be removed by changing that parts of the awarepath by changing the corresponding parts of the physapath 12. Smartphone/ movie analogy for supermorality 13. Smartphone/ movie analogy for superethics
Ch44. Caresphere and how it effects what we do over time
1. Defining the caresphere and carepath
2. Societal caresphere what we care about as a society determines what we accomplish
3. How the caresphere effects what we accomplish
4. Caring about the current conscious moment
5. Caring about the consciousness that you will or think you will experience in the future
6. Caring about no longer being conscious in the moment
7. Caring about ones ixperiencitness.
8. Caring about the one's current conscious moment versus caring about all of one's possible conscious moments
9. Caring about a continuation of your personal qualities.
10. Caring about a continuation of your memories, abilities, etc.
11. Caring about current and future experiences.
12. Caring about a continuation of your genes.
13. Caring about other humans other conscious beings and other things.
14. Caring about other people's ixperiencitness
15. Caring about the future of mankind
16. Caring about your body Caring about ones body
17. Caring about other people's body
18. Caring about your environment
19. How what you care about effects what you experience in the future
20. Caring about the science of superimmortality versus caring about religious dogma
21. The results about caring about the science of superimmortality versus caring about religious dogma.
22. Smartphone/ movie analogy for caresphere
Ch45. This is a caring universe after all
1. What would make the universe a more caring place to exist in?
2. If you think that your only life is produced randomly with much suffering for you and others the universe will not seem very caring.
3. But, if you think that your life is not necessarily final, and you have to and can work to create better lives for yourself and loved ones in the future, you are, and can be into the future caring, along many other people thus making the universe a more caring place to live in.
4. Is your religious universe caring if your god or gods are not caring?
5. There are endless number of of positive awarepath a person could experience where he has free will to choose the different awarepaths if a god cared he could have supposed free will and greater happiness
6. If we can create awarepaducers where any sensepath can be applied to any physapath making any desired awarepath so could gods, so if we live in a world with omnibenevolent, omnipotent, omniscience gods then the terrible suffering that we see is not real but just part of the sensepath that makes us suffer some but not unbearably. Thus the ones that are suffering unbearable are not real but just part of the show so to speak. But we know that the brain can produce horrendous suffering
7. Your ixperiencitness being something that covers many different people, many of them can be caring as well.
8. Different people, with ixperiencitnesses different than yours, can care about different versions of you, thus making potential positive versions of you actual.
many different potential lives actual.
9. The fact that for every (as far as we know) ixperiencitness grouping there are many different potential physapaths producing many positive awarepaths or lives makes the universe a positive and caring place to exist in compared to a world that does not have these positive potential awarepaths.
10. Superimmortality makes for a caring world for animals and other conscious alien life forms
11. Suffering and a lot of other experiences are bad and we want to avoid them, yet these difficult natural experiences have helped us survive, given us empathy for others and added to the complexity of experiences. We can have smaller doses of pain, fear, anxiety uncomfortableness, uncertainty, etc., which can add depth to the understanding of conscious existence.
12. Smartphone/ movie analogy for a caring universeThe long view of a person's history of life's awarepaths. Where you might start with a cave mans life then more modern lives then a current life and then future lives enhanced lives lives in awarepaducers where he experience many amazing things and eventually understands many of the mysteries of the universe. He could look back into the past and see these many different lives like it would be the end of his journey of consciousness then he can also see the many different lives he will experience into the future. He realizes that there are many caring conscious beings out there that make a non conscious universe a caring conscious universe.
Ch46. Superimmortality gives greater purpose and meaning to life
1. Don't need a god's good will to consciously exist again. Purpose to take care of ourselves 2. If others can be conscious versions of you it gives each of us reasons to treat each better. Purpose to make humans other conscious beings lives better 3. If our existence depends on this earth and universe then we need to take care of this earth so that people can continue to exist here way into the future. 4. Purpose to take care of the earth and the universe 5. No matter what has occurred in your life in the past you can always contribute positively now and into the future. 6. Purpose to improve yourself and contribute to the advancement of mankind. 7. You can work toward making the universe a more fair and just place for yourself and for loved one, friends, and people in general. 8. You can make the universe a more caring place by being caring toward versions of yourself, many different loved ones and friends, and people in general. 9. You can't take it with you when you die so you might as well use it up here on earth. You can however, leave it behind for your future selves in certain specific ways Being able to accomplish goals like seeing loved ones again in better circumstances. 10. Being able to accomplish goals like making loved ones conscious again and then experiencing better lives 11. Being able to accomplish goals like making loved ones conscious again and then experiencing better lives 12. Being able to accomplish goals like understanding 13. Being able to accomplish goals like traveling through the universe being in different historical time periods 14. Smartphone/ movie analogy for purpose and meaning to life 15. Purpose and meaning from a mortalist view point 16. Purpose and meaning from a religious view point 17. Negation of single life anxiety (angst) the fear of missing out on experiences that you only have one life to experience 18. Smartphone/ movie analogy for greater purpose and meaning to life take a movie where a person has seems to have little purpose and meaning to life and then make other movies where the same people have better lives
Ch47. Conscious existence “life” is more fair and just when superimmortality is true
1. What is fairness and justice? What is fairness and justice in this singular life, what is fairness and justice over eternity 2. if the universe is not caring because it is not conscious then when the universe is filled with caring conscious beings will it then be a caring universe 3. if the universe is not fair and just because it is not conscious then when the universe is filled with fair and just and caring conscious beings will it then be a fair and just universe 4. Some animals can have an ixperiencitness so they can consciously exist again also 5. The simpler the nervous system of a conscious being is the more likely that that it can be duplicated closely enough to produce the same consciousness and ixperiencitness Thus they are more likely to experience life after death than humans. 6. Many different animals can produce a repetition of the same ixperiencitness making many different animals into one connected ixperiencitness 7. Life is more fair and just for animals if superimmortality applies to them 8. Life is more fair and just for humans if superimmortality is true even if one life is not fair or just there can be many more that are fair and just or even more fair and just than they should be 9. Smartphone/ movie analogy for more fair and just take a sad movie and then make other movies where the same people have better lives
Ch48. According to the science of superimmortality, what can you experience after death?
1. You can be totally unaware of ever existing before in each preceding life. 2. You can experience again birth, life, and death over and over again with the same or different awarepaths. 3. You can experience continuing to exist from any point in your past, present, or future life. 4. You can experience continuing to exist from any point in your potential future life. 5. You can experience continuing to exist from a different life which is a version of yourself i.e., that has your ixperiencitness. 6. You won't be aware of being dead until you are alive again and having an awareness of changes. 7. Repetition of your current life. 8. Repetition with any number of variations to your current life. 9. You can be aware of no time passing between your death and being alive again. 10. You can be aware of any amount of time passing between your death and being alive again 11. You can experience being enhanced with greater knowledge, intelligence, skills, abilities, and more senses etc. 12. You can have some to all new memories. 13. You can be created in an awarepaducer with creating a bizarre reality and think that this is real. 14. You can find yourself in a previous or historical life 15. You can find yourself in a war, wounded, rich, poor, king, president, astronaut, with the corresponding memories with or without your current body ever experiencing these events. 16. You could also be aware of past lives that you experienced 17. Your could be aware of, and have memories of, past lives that you have never experienced. 18. Smartphone/ movie analogy for future of a character in other movies, in what further parts can an actor play in, in all of eternity?
Ch49. Combining awarepaths
1. Placing two different physapath, with the same ixperiencitness together in space and time does not produce a combined awarepath. 2. To make a combined awarepath takes extra structure and functioning 3. Smartphone analogy for there being no subjective awareness of many different smart phone producing the same movie or version of the same movie To produce a subjective awareness of other smartphones producing the same or a variation of the same awarepath requires a different physapath. 4. Smartphone combining movies analogy: There are many different ways of doing it each having a different structure and functioning in the smartphone the smart phone physapath that produces a movie will only produce that awarepath of the movie. 5. Combining awarepaths can be a form of enhancement 6. Combining awarepaths does not have to be a form of enhancement if the combining awarepaths are a lesser version of the original awarepaths 7. Why would combining of awarepaths be worth while? If they are a version of your self i.e., they have your ixperiencitness they can give greater understanding in general, about consciousness, and of reality, different awarepaths,
Ch50. Summation of the science of superimmortality's Principles and key concepts
1. The functioning of the brain produces consciousness without any supernatural entities like a soul or gods. 2. As the structure of the brain changes the consciousness produced by the brain also changes. 3. Identical structure and functioning in the same or different body produces identical behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness. 4. Identical physapaths produce an identical behaviorpath, awarepath and ixpepath. 5. Many closely identical structures and functionings in the same or different bodies produce identical behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness. Many closely identical physapaths can produce identical behaviorpaths, awarepaths, and ixpepaths 6. Many more divergent structures and functioning bodies will produce different behaviors and consciousnesses but the same ixperiencitness. Many more divergent physapaths will produce different behaviorpaths and awarepaths but the same ixperiencitness. 7. Behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness are continuum concepts. Meaning that there are many small variances within them. 8. There can be many different conscious versions of you existing at the same time. It is often the case the different versions of you will not be aware of these other versions of you 9. The principles of the science of superimmortality apply to most if not all conscious life forms including conscious animals, conscious electronic devices, and conscious alien life forms. 10. If I experience many different consciousness why don't I experience all of them at once? You only experience what is being produced by the corresponding structure and functioning of a body. Why don't I experience every actual structure and functioning that is being produced at the same time. A particular structure and functioning will only produce the consciousness and ixperiencitness produced by that structure and functioning. To produce a structure and functioning with an awareness of several different awarepaths at the same time with the same ixperiencitness it will take a different structure and functioning than the two separate ones 11. This allows that many different awarepaths are possible that you will experience both the individual awarepaths with consciousness like you are experiencing now and then combined awarepaths that can see/ experience more than one awarepath at a time.
Glossary of terms
New terms, Define and use these terms, Science needs its well defined scientific terms and arguments
1. Awarepaducer a device for producing conscious lives it can be a human body but they can also be very complex producing numerous different conscious life time or awarepath 2. Awarepath consciousness and its changes over time of the life time of a body 3. Behaviorpath the behavior that a body produces over time 4. Cidentireplica a continuing identical replica it has an identical physapath to that of the original but because it is made of different matter it has a different physipath that the original 5. Enviropath the environmental conditions that a body experience over its life time. it effect how the body functions over time heat, food air pressure water quality chemicals drugs, alcohol humidity etc. 6. Original's body, structure and functioning, conscious behavior, ixperiencitness 7. Physapath physical object and its changes over time 8. Physipath existence proofs 9. Qmpath short for quantum mechanical path this is the path of random changes over time that occur to and change an object like a human body due the nature of matter and energy If all the physical effects on an object are understood the object can still behave in unexpected way. This does not effect the concept that identical structure and functioning will produce identical behavior because a if the physapath changes due to the qmpath being different the structure and functioning is no longer the same 10. Sensepath the sensual input from the senses over time 11. Videntireplica, a variation of the original or cidentireplica, can be nearly identical producing the same behavior, consciousness, and ixperiencitness as the original or the original's cidentireplica
Glossary of principles Glossary of Equations A science should have a few equations Index