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I think it is at this part of the debate where the ship of Theseus becomes interesting.

The sequence of events in the brain are what make up the mind. But, if you replace the brain while keeping the sequence of events continuous, you have a new brain and the same mind.

Or maybe just the same brain. Ship of Theseus and all that.



> The sequence of events in the brain are what make up the mind. But, if you replace the brain while keeping the sequence of events continuous, you have a new brain and the same mind.

Okay, but as far as I know, we've never replaced a brain while keeping the sequence of events continuous--I'm not even sure what actions one would take to do that.


Oh, we definitely haven't yet.

But the fact that we can't currently do so doesn't mean that it isn't relevant to the philosophical discussion of whether the mind is a separate entity from the brain.

It seems likely to me, though, that we'll be able to really make progress on that question in the next century or so for this very reason.




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