Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 8th, 2022, 7:13 pm
Gertie wrote: ↑February 8th, 2022, 4:21 pm
Would reconstituted Gertie even be alive and functional? That would seem a question so far beyond current capabilities that humanity will have to wait for their future AI overlords to work it out
It puzzles all who know me
Better to be a puzzling animated human than inert human stuff rebuilt from the BH's information! Meanwhile, the important quantum details would be lost to Hawking radiation, which gives no clue as to the source objects.
I always found the idea of lost information disappointing, how billions of people accumulate so much life knowledge and experience that is simply lost when they pass.
If you could make a functioning, living replica of Gertie before she fell in the black hole, the specific neural connections which correllate to Gertie's specific memories would be preserved, and she would presumably be able to recall Gertie's memories in the same way Gertie did.
So while a complete physical description of Gertie (all the material physical information about Gertie) won't capture what Gertie is experientially thinking or feeling or her memories which she can bring to mind, a physical replica will still capture that experiential information.
It's just that physics has no place, account of, or descriptive informational representation for conscious experience.
We can note mind-body correllation, and theoretically potentially 'decode' the patterns of neural connectivity in Gertie's physical brain's memory system (and other brain systems) to know what Gertie's memories are, but only because of that correllation. But we don't know why the correllation exists (the mind-body problem). So we can only
assume destroying the material brain processes (eg by jumping in a black hole) destroys conscious experience, and the ways that conscious experience can be described (its information). But physics has no direct way of tracking that conscious experience itself, only the correlated physical brainstuff.