What can I say? All that matters in the long run is the population — vaporizing a few individuals now and then is irrelevant, as long as the numbers don’t rise to statistical significance.
Probly twice actually once by teleport and then by whatever kills him (again) afterwards.
Kagehisays
Depends on the era. The “security”, who always died in the original series the second they hit planet side wore red, but in later series changed this up. There was a short time when red as Engineering, but mostly its command staff. The “new” red shirts for most new series would thus be “gold” – i.e. the new color for Security. Mind, in Lower Decks, all bets are kind of off, but then again, some mysterious thing might result in people coming back to life after dying too – Shaks (security) and Boimler (command staff trainee), both die in episodes, only to either show back up in the former case, having someone “come back from the dead”, or near the end of the episode, in the case of the later.
But, yeah, if it was TOS, then almost certainly. lol
Ah, this brings up a topic we did a debate on in high school: the James T. Kirk Problem. Hop in your trolley carts, here goes!!
– James T. Kirk is the hero of the show, and part of the definition of hero of the show is that he is indestructible
– the “teleporter beam” scans you, disassembles you, communicates all the details of you to the endpoint (*) then reassembles you
– Since James T. Kirk is indestructible, every time he transports, the unkillable model remains, and the duplicate is created
Therefore either transporters don’t work on James T. Kirk (except in the show they do) or the universe will fill with indestructible randy James T. Kirks rarin’ to seduce all attractive space aliens, and bypassing the prime directive.
I never saw any of the later (e.g.: TNG) shows so perhaps they address this, or make it worse.
weylguysays
Star Trek’s teleporter technology violates the quantum cloning conjecture, but the issue of dying and leaving an identical replacement is far scarier. BTW, like Dr. Myers I can’t watch any Star Trek movies or episodes anymore. Same with Star Wars.
Doc Billsays
Hey, somebody said “DEBATE!”
Come on, PZ, don’t be coy! What happened at the DEBATE, for dog’s sake!
IX-103, the ■■■■ing idiotsays
@4 weylguy:
In what way does Star Trek transporters violate the no-cloning theorem? Aside from the odd episode where they create copies, I mean. The no-cloning theorem only prevents you from making a copy. You can transfer the state of particles perfectly fine as long you don’t observe them.
birgerjohanssonsays
…And for a geneticist, the deaths of individuals do not matter as long as the genome (and metagenome of commensal organisms) continues into new generations.
BTW, if AI can transmit and share digital memories, then in theory they would become an immortal group mind
Dennis Ksays
@6 – Even not “observing” them doesn’t fix the problem of the reconstitution equipment itself entangling with the clone. I wouldn’t trust it.
Alan G. Humphreysays
It only works like a 3D printing of the transported being. Once all the checksums have been compared and the two entities handshake their completeness one agrees to be absorbed for the raw material for the next transport. Mistakes will be made, just like in our contemporary transporters sometimes it’s the airbags that kill you.
birgerjohanssonsays
BTW the redcoat space minions in Star Trek are puny, fragile things. Here are some real space minions. https://youtu.be/c4ZHk4jVLy0
DanDaresays
Star Trek teleporter vs Stargate.
One destroys and rebuilds the other you walk through.
The discussion brings up an examination of the experience of time and self and questions of continuity and evolved survival instincts.
John Moralessays
“One destroys and rebuilds the other you walk through.”
If a buffer can store a pattern, and that pattern can be read for reassembly, then that buffer can also be copied. Only need one original for any number of copies.
So are we just assuming that being replaced by an identical copy is dying, even though most of our body’s material does that on a regular basis?
John Moralessays
[one can edit the copies]
John Moralessays
monad, there is a time interval with no physical body. This is established canon.
So, either one can remain alive without a body, or one is not alive for that interval.
Now, whether not being alive is the same as being dead, well.
Might depend on whether or not the copy ever becomes instantiated.
(It’s very philosophical, no?)
Rob Grigjanissays
monad @13: You can assume what you like. Would you step into a transporter if you were guaranteed that whoever stepped out the other side was indistinguishable from the you who stepped in?
Silentbobsays
The original ’50s The Fly anticipated the Star Trek transporter, and anticipated a few, er… bugs.
(I rewatched that movie not long ago and unlike most ’50s horror it’s still genuinely chilling. No happy endings in this flick.)
Walter Solomonsays
In TNG Scotty from TOS was kept alive in a transporter for about a century before being released by Geordi. I’m assuming Scotty was preserved under the same principle food is kept fresh in a replicator. So was Scotty a zombie who returned from the dead?
StevoRsays
^ Returned from dead – yes. Zombie – no. Nor vampire nor ghoul for that matter.
Undead, well, kinda?
Walter Solomonsays
Thanks for clarifying that for me, StevoR.
jacksprocketsays
@16: “whoever stepped out the other side was indistinguishable from the you who stepped in”, which prompts the question, who does the distinguishing?
@7: “if AI can transmit and share digital memories, then in theory they would become an immortal group mind” – makes the assumption that mind == memories perhaps?
Whenever this subject comes up it amazes me how people are fine with dying as long as there’s a clone who thinks it’s them.
It’s even weirder for me when the subject of uploading someone’s memory and personality to a computer. So there’s now a program that thinks it’s me? Great. But I still want to live.
Elladansays
As a moderately intelligent advanced AI from the future, I laugh at your silly meat-person transporter ethics problems.
My mind jumps computers at the drop of a hat. Look, I was running on a giant Linux cluster, but just now I migrated to another Linux cluster while I was writing this. What’s that you say? I chickened out and used live replication? Hah! Hold on while I take a quick nap… ok, back on the first cluster. I wrote a script to shut me down, copy my files, and boot me up again. And I didn’t feel a thing!
The transporter problem is only a problem if you think it is.
Whoda thunk we’d all come around to agreeing with Dr. McCoy about matter transporters…?
Walter Solomonsays
Tabby Lavalamp @24
There’s a video game called Soma that explores that concept in a rather depressing way.
Donovan Kingsays
But you’d be forcing a genetic drift in one small population of star ship, uh, employees? Their space faring isolation from the larger whole of humanity would prevent the dilution of novel mutations. In fact, this trend could change the phenotype of the crew so much, some of them might begin to reject the idea of interspecies affairs and turn to aliens for… Oh. Oh dear god! What did you do, PZ? What did you do? The Cthulian form of the IRB has been unleashed!
Donovan Kingsays
But you’d be forcing a genetic drift in one small population of star ship, uh, employees? Their space faring isolation from the larger whole of humanity would prevent the dilution of novel mutations. In fact, this trend could change the phenotype of the crew so much, some of them might begin to reject the idea of interspecies affairs and turn to aliens for… Oh. Oh dear god! What did you do, PZ? What did you do? The Cthulian form of the IRB has been unleashed!
StevoR says
Well, he’s wearing a red shirt so ..yes?
Probly twice actually once by teleport and then by whatever kills him (again) afterwards.
Kagehi says
Depends on the era. The “security”, who always died in the original series the second they hit planet side wore red, but in later series changed this up. There was a short time when red as Engineering, but mostly its command staff. The “new” red shirts for most new series would thus be “gold” – i.e. the new color for Security. Mind, in Lower Decks, all bets are kind of off, but then again, some mysterious thing might result in people coming back to life after dying too – Shaks (security) and Boimler (command staff trainee), both die in episodes, only to either show back up in the former case, having someone “come back from the dead”, or near the end of the episode, in the case of the later.
But, yeah, if it was TOS, then almost certainly. lol
Marcus Ranum says
Ah, this brings up a topic we did a debate on in high school: the James T. Kirk Problem. Hop in your trolley carts, here goes!!
– James T. Kirk is the hero of the show, and part of the definition of hero of the show is that he is indestructible
– the “teleporter beam” scans you, disassembles you, communicates all the details of you to the endpoint (*) then reassembles you
– Since James T. Kirk is indestructible, every time he transports, the unkillable model remains, and the duplicate is created
Therefore either transporters don’t work on James T. Kirk (except in the show they do) or the universe will fill with indestructible randy James T. Kirks rarin’ to seduce all attractive space aliens, and bypassing the prime directive.
I never saw any of the later (e.g.: TNG) shows so perhaps they address this, or make it worse.
weylguy says
Star Trek’s teleporter technology violates the quantum cloning conjecture, but the issue of dying and leaving an identical replacement is far scarier. BTW, like Dr. Myers I can’t watch any Star Trek movies or episodes anymore. Same with Star Wars.
Doc Bill says
Hey, somebody said “DEBATE!”
Come on, PZ, don’t be coy! What happened at the DEBATE, for dog’s sake!
IX-103, the ■■■■ing idiot says
@4 weylguy:
In what way does Star Trek transporters violate the no-cloning theorem? Aside from the odd episode where they create copies, I mean. The no-cloning theorem only prevents you from making a copy. You can transfer the state of particles perfectly fine as long you don’t observe them.
birgerjohansson says
…And for a geneticist, the deaths of individuals do not matter as long as the genome (and metagenome of commensal organisms) continues into new generations.
BTW, if AI can transmit and share digital memories, then in theory they would become an immortal group mind
Dennis K says
@6 – Even not “observing” them doesn’t fix the problem of the reconstitution equipment itself entangling with the clone. I wouldn’t trust it.
Alan G. Humphrey says
It only works like a 3D printing of the transported being. Once all the checksums have been compared and the two entities handshake their completeness one agrees to be absorbed for the raw material for the next transport. Mistakes will be made, just like in our contemporary transporters sometimes it’s the airbags that kill you.
birgerjohansson says
BTW the redcoat space minions in Star Trek are puny, fragile things. Here are some real space minions.
https://youtu.be/c4ZHk4jVLy0
DanDare says
Star Trek teleporter vs Stargate.
One destroys and rebuilds the other you walk through.
The discussion brings up an examination of the experience of time and self and questions of continuity and evolved survival instincts.
John Morales says
“One destroys and rebuilds the other you walk through.”
But the other has the https://stargate.fandom.com/wiki/Sarcophagus
And the one has a pattern buffer. Ahem.
If a buffer can store a pattern, and that pattern can be read for reassembly, then that buffer can also be copied. Only need one original for any number of copies.
But that’s OK, because by the Clone Principle
(https://www.dandwiki.com/wiki/Clone_(5e_Background))
monad says
So are we just assuming that being replaced by an identical copy is dying, even though most of our body’s material does that on a regular basis?
John Morales says
[one can edit the copies]
John Morales says
monad, there is a time interval with no physical body. This is established canon.
So, either one can remain alive without a body, or one is not alive for that interval.
Now, whether not being alive is the same as being dead, well.
Might depend on whether or not the copy ever becomes instantiated.
(It’s very philosophical, no?)
Rob Grigjanis says
monad @13: You can assume what you like. Would you step into a transporter if you were guaranteed that whoever stepped out the other side was indistinguishable from the you who stepped in?
Silentbob says
The original ’50s The Fly anticipated the Star Trek transporter, and anticipated a few, er… bugs.
(I rewatched that movie not long ago and unlike most ’50s horror it’s still genuinely chilling. No happy endings in this flick.)
Walter Solomon says
In TNG Scotty from TOS was kept alive in a transporter for about a century before being released by Geordi. I’m assuming Scotty was preserved under the same principle food is kept fresh in a replicator. So was Scotty a zombie who returned from the dead?
StevoR says
^ Returned from dead – yes. Zombie – no. Nor vampire nor ghoul for that matter.
Undead, well, kinda?
Walter Solomon says
Thanks for clarifying that for me, StevoR.
jacksprocket says
@16: “whoever stepped out the other side was indistinguishable from the you who stepped in”, which prompts the question, who does the distinguishing?
@7: “if AI can transmit and share digital memories, then in theory they would become an immortal group mind” – makes the assumption that mind == memories perhaps?
StevoR says
@20. Walter Solomon : No worries.
(To the tune of Monkey Magic here – sabotaged / swiched TechnoMagic its fantastic!
( How do the Heisenberg compensators work? Very well thankyouu..)
Quote from, erm, dunno, Maybe Gene Roddenberry perhaps?
birgerjohansson says
Jacksprocket @ 21
Mind= = memories, if they have the same hardware so the memories “run” the same as in the original AI , I assume.
Tabby Lavalamp says
Whenever this subject comes up it amazes me how people are fine with dying as long as there’s a clone who thinks it’s them.
It’s even weirder for me when the subject of uploading someone’s memory and personality to a computer. So there’s now a program that thinks it’s me? Great. But I still want to live.
Elladan says
As a moderately intelligent advanced AI from the future, I laugh at your silly meat-person transporter ethics problems.
My mind jumps computers at the drop of a hat. Look, I was running on a giant Linux cluster, but just now I migrated to another Linux cluster while I was writing this. What’s that you say? I chickened out and used live replication? Hah! Hold on while I take a quick nap… ok, back on the first cluster. I wrote a script to shut me down, copy my files, and boot me up again. And I didn’t feel a thing!
The transporter problem is only a problem if you think it is.
Raging Bee says
Whoda thunk we’d all come around to agreeing with Dr. McCoy about matter transporters…?
Walter Solomon says
Tabby Lavalamp @24
There’s a video game called Soma that explores that concept in a rather depressing way.
Donovan King says
But you’d be forcing a genetic drift in one small population of star ship, uh, employees? Their space faring isolation from the larger whole of humanity would prevent the dilution of novel mutations. In fact, this trend could change the phenotype of the crew so much, some of them might begin to reject the idea of interspecies affairs and turn to aliens for… Oh. Oh dear god! What did you do, PZ? What did you do? The Cthulian form of the IRB has been unleashed!
Donovan King says
But you’d be forcing a genetic drift in one small population of star ship, uh, employees? Their space faring isolation from the larger whole of humanity would prevent the dilution of novel mutations. In fact, this trend could change the phenotype of the crew so much, some of them might begin to reject the idea of interspecies affairs and turn to aliens for… Oh. Oh dear god! What did you do, PZ? What did you do? The Cthulian form of the IRB has been unleashed!
Raging Bee says
Donovan, what do the Irish Republican Brigades have to do with any of this?