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Consciousness, Culpability, and Cryopreservation:  Practic Consciousness, Culpability, and Cryopreservation:  Practic

Consciousness, Culpability, and Cryopreservation:  Practic - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2015-11-18

Consciousness, Culpability, and Cryopreservation:  Practic - PPT Presentation

Terasem 5th Colloquium on Law of Futuristic Persons Linda MacDonald Glenn JD LLM Alden March Bioethics Institute Albany Medical Center Three Approaches to the Problem of Consciousness ID: 196934

physical consciousness states culpability consciousness physical culpability states matter pan mental law problem spatio dualism mind causation physics process

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Slide1

Consciousness, Culpability, and Cryopreservation:  Practical Problems to Preserving the Person

Terasem 5th Colloquium on Law of Futuristic Persons

Linda MacDonald Glenn, JD, LLM,

Alden March Bioethics Institute

Albany Medical Center Slide2

Three Approaches to the ‘Problem’ of Consciousness

Dualism

Descartes, substance dualism, Matter vs. “Energy” (But physics has shown that matter and energy are the same)

Physicalism

different strains (property dualists, monistic realists), but maintains that all that exists is matter; consciousness refers to physical & chemical processes going on in the brain.

But Physics doesn’t answer everything – e.g. how black holes are formed; and we have yet to find a unified theory.)

PanPsychism

(or Pan-Experientialism)

Mentality and physicality are two aspects of the same phenomenon; events, not just physical substances, constitute experiences

Slide3

Causation and Culpability

A theory of Physicalism presents other conundrums:

Physical objects are

spatio

-temporal, and bear

spatio

-temporal and causal relations to each other; and while we can measure the physical neural correlates of mental states, it still remains that mental states are characterized by two main properties,

subjectivity,

otherwise known as privileged access, and

intentionality.Slide4

Causation and Culpability But the possessor of mental states has a privileged access to them that no-one else can share (e.g. the ‘problem of other minds’, but no corresponding ‘problem of my own mind’)

This suggests to some philosophers that minds are not ordinary occupants of physical space.Slide5

Culpability and Free Will However, as Martine has pointed out, intentionality

has particular significance in the law. To be culpable, one must have intention.

But if the mind/consciousness is reducible to a physical state, then wouldn’t all our actions be predictable? Would the concept of free will be obsolete? Slide6

The Consciousness Continuum

Correlates in the law:

Altered states of consciousness used as a defense, mitigating circumstances

Proportional autonomy

The Role of Emotion and Empathy in the Legal System (particularly in jury trials)Slide7

Consciousness and CryogenicsRecent discoveries reveal that that complete absence of electrical activity in the brain does not prevent full neurological recovery.*

1

Legally dead does not mean "irreversibly dead“; Death is a process, not an event -- and the process takes longer than is commonly believed. Damage associated with low temperature preservation and clinical death that is not reversible today is theoretically reversible in the future

. *

2Slide8

A Unified Philosophy of Mind? Pan-Experientialism may work best for AC (Artificial Consciousness) and Cryogenics

(See Charles Birch,

Why I Became a Pan-Experientialist

)