Time limits on restoration experiments
Time limits on restoration experiments are experiments that deal with the concept of how the time between death and itorestoration effects the ixperiencitness and consciousness produced by the restoration.
Does it matter how long it takes for a restoration to occur after death if the desired structure and functioning is achived in the restoration?
We can construct an expecontinuum where the major variable is the lenght of time between death and restoration. In the experiments we can use a very large number cidentireplicas of any one specific original. We can start a large amount of cidentireplicas at the same time. in this experiment it does not matter how they are created or at what point on the original's physipath they were started at.
They all die at the same time. We then restore one after the other to the same point in their physipath before they died. The first one is restored with in miliseconds of the time of real death and the last one is restored billions or more years after it's death. Since there is a expecontinuum being produced we can have the cases as close as we want or as far apart as we want or need, and we can extend the time limit out as long as we wish. What we are looking for are itoanomalies, itoinconsistencies, itoboundaries and itodiscontinuities in the data. Since they all are restored to the same structure and functioning, they should all have the same consciousness and ixperiencitness of the original at that point in the original life and corresponding to the dead cidentireplica at that point in his life.
The possible outcomes, if the above is not true poses many problems to be solved. We will limit ourselves to the ixperiencitness concept based on consciousness . We will not deal with the concepts of souls or the like here because there is so little, if any evidence of their existence, and they are basically postulated for immortality purposes anyway and that is what we are proving here but in a different and scientific way.
At any length of time in between one cidentireplica dies then another. One after another the cidentireplicas die
There is another variable which is length of time of the actual restoration itself. A restoration is not likely to be instantaneous.
A physapath restoration is likely to be simpler and easier than a physipath restoration because a physapath restoration does not require the same matter to be used
See also: restoration experiments, restoration arguments, replacement of matter experiments