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Daniel C. Dennett, 1978
Now that I've won my suit under the Freedom of Information Act, I am at
liberty to reveal for the first time a curious episode in my life that may be of
interest not only to those engaged in research in the philosophy of mind,
artificial intelligence, and neuroscience but also to the general public.
Several years ago I was approached by Pentagon officials who asked me to
volunteer for a highly dangerous and secret mission. In collaboration with NASA
and Howard Hughes, the Department of Defense was spending billions to develop a
Supersonic Tunneling Underground Device, or STUD. It was supposed to tunnel
through the earth's core at great speed and deliver a specially designed atomic
warhead "right up the Red's missile silos," as one of the Pentagon brass put it.
The problem was that in an early test they had succeeded in lodging a warhead
about a mile deep under Tulsa, Oklahoma, and they wanted me to retrieve it for
them. "Why me?" I asked. Well, the mission involved some pioneering applications
of current brain research, and they had heard of my interest in brains and of
course my Faustian curiosity and great courage and so forth.... Well, how could
I refuse? The difficulty that brought the Pentagon to my door was that the
device I'd been asked to recover was fiercely radioactive, in a new way.
According to monitoring instruments, something about the nature of the device
and its complex interactions with pockets of material deep in the earth had
produced radiation that could cause severe abnormalities in certain tissues of
the brain. No way had been found to shield the brain from these deadly rays,
which were apparently harmless to other tissues and organs of the body. So it
had been decided that the person sent to recover the device should leave his
brain behind. It would be kept in a sale place as there it could execute its
normal control functions by elaborate radio links. Would I submit to a surgical
procedure that would completely remove my brain, which would then be placed in a
life-support system at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston? Each input and
output pathway, as it was severed, would be restored by a pair of
microminiaturized radio transceivers, one attached precisely to the brain, the
other to the nerve stumps in the empty cranium. No information would be lost,
all the connectivity would be preserved. At first I was a bit reluctant. Would
it really work? The Houston brain surgeons encouraged me. "Think of it," they
said, "as a mere stretching of the nerves. If your brain were just moved over an
inch in your skull, that would not alter or impair your mind. We're simply going
to make the nerves indefinitely elastic by splicing radio links into them."
I was shown around the life-support lab in Houston and saw the sparkling new
vat in which my brain would be placed, were I to agree. I met the large and
brilliant support team of neurologists, hematologists, biophysicists, and
electrical engineers, and after several days of discussions and demonstrations I
agreed to give it a try. I was subjected to an enormous array of blood tests,
brain scans, experiments, interviews, and the like. They took down my
autobiography at great length, recorded tedious lists of my beliefs, hopes,
fears, and tastes. They even listed my favorite stereo recordings and gave me a
crash session of psychoanalysis.
The day for surgery arrived at last and of course I was anesthetized and
remember nothing of the operation itself. When I came out of anesthesia, I
opened my eyes, looked around, and asked the inevitable, the traditional, the
lamentably hackneyed postoperative question: "Where am l?" The nurse smiled down
at me. "You're in Houston," she said, and I reflected that this still had a good
chance of being the truth one way or another. She handed me a mirror. Sure
enough, there were the tiny antennae poling up through their titanium ports
cemented into my skull. "I gather tile operation was a success," I said. "I want
to go see my brain." They led me (I was a bit dizzy and unsteady) down a long
corridor and into the life-support lab. A cheer went up from the assembled
support team, and I responded with what I hoped was a jaunty salute. Still
feeling lightheaded, I was helped over to tire life-support vat. I peered
through the glass. There, floating in what looked like ginger ale, was
undeniably a human brain, though it was almost covered with printed circuit
chips, plastic tubules, electrodes, and other paraphernalia. "Is that mine?" I
asked. "Hit the output transmitter switch there on the side of the vat and see
for yourself," the project director replied. I moved the switch to OFF, and
immediately slumped, groggy and nauseated, into the arms of the technicians, one
of whom kindly restored the switch to its ON position. While I recovered my
equilibrium and composure, I thought to myself: "Well, here I am sitting on a
folding chair, staring through a piece of plate glass at my own brain... But
wait," I said to myself, "shouldn't I have thought, 'Here I am, suspended in a
bubbling fluid, being stared at by my own eyes'?" I tried to think this latter
thought. I tried to project it into the tank, offering it hopefully to my brain,
but I failed to carry off the exercise with any conviction. I tried again. "Here
am I, Daniel Dennett, suspended in a bubbling fluid, being stared at by my own
eyes." No, it just didn't work. Most puzzling and confusing. Being a philosopher
of firm physicalist conviction, I believed unswervingly that the tokening of my
thoughts was occurring somewhere in my brain: yet, when I thought "Here I am,"
where the thought occurred to me was here, outside the vat, where I, Dennett,
was standing staring at my brain.
I tried and tried to think myself into the vat, but to no avail. I tried to
build up to the task by doing mental exercises. I thought to myself, "The sun
is shining over there, " five times in rapid succession, each time mentally
ostending a different place: in order, the sunlit corner of the lab, the visible
front lawn of the hospital, Houston, Mars, and Jupiter. I found I had little
difficulty in getting my "there" 's to hop all over the celestial map with their
proper references. I could loft a "there" in an instant through the farthest
reaches of space, and then aim the next "there" with pinpoint accuracy at the
upper left quadrant of a freckle on my arm. Why was I having such trouble with
"here"? "Here in Houston" worked well enough, and so did "here in the lab," and
even "here in this part of the lab," but "here in the vat" always seemed merely
an unmeant mental mouthing. I tried closing my eyes while thinking it. This
seemed to help, but still I couldn't manage to pull it off, except perhaps for a
fleeting instant. I couldn't be sure. The discovery that I couldn't be sure was
also unsettling. How did I know where I meant by "here" when I thought "here"?
Could I think I meant one place when in fact I meant another? I didn't see how
that could be admitted without untying the few bonds of intimacy between a
person and his own mental life that had survived the onslaught of the brain
scientists and philosophers, the physicalists and behaviorists. Perhaps I was
incorrigible about where I meant when I said "here." But in my present
circumstances it seemed that either I was doomed by sheer force of mental habit
to thinking systematically false indexical thoughts, or where a person is (and
hence where his thoughts are tokened for purposes of semantic analysis) is not
necessarily where his brain, the physical seat of his soul, resides. Nagged by
confusion, I attempted to orient myself by falling back on a favorite
philosopher's ploy. I began naming things.
"Yorick," I said aloud to my brain, "you are my brain. The rest of my body,
seated in this chair, I dub 'Hamlet.' " So here we all are: Yorick's my brain,
Hamlet's my body, and I am Dennett. Avow, where am l? And when I think "where am
l?" where's that thought tokened? Is it tokened in my brain, lounging about in
the vat, or right here between my ears where it seems to be tokened? Or nowhere?
Its temporal coordinates give me no trouble; must it not have spatial
coordinates as well? I began making a list of the alternatives.
1. Where Hamlet goes there goes Dennet. This principle was easily
refuted by appeal to the familiar brain- transplant thought experiments so
enjoyed by philosophers. If Tom and Dick switch brains, Tom is the fellow with
Dick's former body--just ask him; he'll claim to be Tom and tell you the most
intimate details of Tom's autobiography. It was clear enough, then, that my
current body and I could part company, but not likely that I could be separated
from my brain. The rule of thumb that emerged so plainly from the thought
experiments was that in a brain-transplant operation, one wanted to be the donor
not the recipient. Better to call such an operation a body transplant, in fact.
So perhaps the truth was,
2. Where Yorick goes there goes Dennett This was not at all appealing,
however. How could I be in the vat and not about to go anywhere, when I was so
obviously outside the vat looking in and beginning to make guilty plans to
return to my room for a substantial lunch? This begged the question I realized,
but it still seemed to be getting at something important. Casting about for some
support for my intuition, I hit upon a legalistic sort of argument that might
have appealed to Locke.
Suppose, I argued to myself, I were now to fly to California, rob a bank, and
be apprehended. In which state would I be tried: in California, where the
robbery took place, or in Texas, where the brains of the outfit were located?
Would I be a California felon with an out- of- state brain, or a Texas felon
remotely controlling an accomplice of sorts in California? It seemed possible
that I might beat such a rap just on the undecidability of that jurisdictional
question, though perhaps it would be deemed an interstate, and hence Federal,
offense. In any event, suppose I were convicted. Was it likely that California
would be satisfied to throw Hamlet into the brig, knowing that Yorick was living
the good life and luxuriously taking the waters in Texas? Would Texas
incarcerate Yorick, leaving Hamlet free to take the next boat to Rio? I his
alternative appealed to me. Barring capital punishment or other cruel and
unusual punishment, the state would be obliged to maintain the life- support
system for Yorick though they might move him from Houston to Leavenworth, and
aside from the unpleasantness of the opprobrium, 1, for one, would not mind at
all and would consider myself a free man under those circumstances. If the state
has an interest in forcibly relocating persons in institutions, it would fail to
relocate file in any institution by locating Yorick there. If this were true, it
suggested a third alternative.
3. Dennett is wherever he thinks he is. Generalized, the claim was as
follows: At any given time a person has a point of view and the location of the
point of view (which is determined internally by the content of the point of
view) is also the location of the person.
Such a proposition is not without its perplexities, but to me it seemed a
step in the right direction. The only trouble was that it seemed to place one in
a heads- l- win/tails- you- lose situation of unlikely infallibility as regards
location. Hadn't I myself often been wrong about where I was, and at least as
often uncertain? Couldn't one get lost? Of course, but getting lost
geographically is not the only way one might get lost. If one were lost in the
woods one could attempt to reassure oneself with the consolation that at least
one knew where one was: one was right here in the familiar surroundings of one's
own body. Perhaps in this case one would not have drawn one's attention to much
to be thankful for. Still, there were worse plights imaginable, and I wasn't
sure I wasn't in such a plight right now.
Point of view clearly had something to do with personal location, but it was
itself an unclear notion. It was obvious that the content of one's point of view
was not the same as or determined by the content of one's beliefs or thoughts.
For example, what should we say about the point of view of the Cinerama viewer
who shrieks and twists in his seat as the roller- coaster footage overcomes his
psychic distancing? Has he forgotten that he is safely seated in the theater?
Here I was inclined to say that the person is experiencing an illusory shift in
point of view. In other cases, my inclination to call such shifts illusory was
less strong. The workers in laboratories and plants who handle dangerous
materials by operating feedback- controlled mechanical arms and hands undergo a
shift in point of view that is crisper and more pronounced than anything
Cinerama can provoke. They can feel the heft and slipperiness of the containers
they manipulate with their metal fingers. They know perfectly well where they
are and are not fooled into false beliefs by the experience, yet it is as if
they were inside the isolation chamber they are peering into. With mental
effort, they can manage to shift their point of view back and forth, rather like
making a transparent Necker cube or an Escher drawing change orientation before
one's eves. It does seem extravagant to suppose that in performing this bit of
mental gymnastics, they are transporting themselves back and forth.
Still their example gave me hope. If I was in fact in the vat in spite of my
intuitions, I might be able to train myself to adopt that point of view even as
a matter of habit. I should dwell on images of myself comfortably floating in my
vat, beaming volitions to that familiar body out there. I reflected that the
ease or difficulty of this task was presumably independent of the truth about
the location of one's brain Had I been practicing before the operation, I might
now be finding it second nature. You might now yourself try such a trompe
l'oeil. Imagine you have written an inflammatory letter which has been
published in the Times the result of which s that the government has chosen to
impound your brain for a probationary period of three years in its Dangerous
Brain Clinic in Bethesda, Maryland. Your body of course is allowed freedom to
earn a salary and thus to continue its function of laying up income to be taxed
At this
moment, however, your body is seated in an auditorium listening to a peculiar
account by Daniel Dennett of his own similar experience. Try it. Think yourself
to Bethesda, and then hark back longingly to your body, far away, and yet
seeming so near. It is only with long-distance restraint (yours? the
government's?) that you can control your impulse to get those hands clapping in
polite applause before navigating the old body to the rest room and a well-
deserved glass of evening sherry in the lounge. l he task of imagination is
certainly difficult, but if you achieve your goal the results might be
consoling.
Anyway, there I was in Houston, lost in thought as one might say, but not for
long. My speculations were soon interrupted by the Houston doctors, who wished
to test out my new prosthetic nervous system before sending me off on my
hazardous mission. As I mentioned before, I was a bit dizzy at first, and not
surprisingly, although I soon habituated myself to my new circumstances (which
were, after all, well nigh indistinguishable from my old circumstances). My
accommodation was not perfect, however, and to this day I continue to be plagued
by minor coordination difficulties. The speed of light is fast, but finite, and
as my brain and body move farther and farther apart, the delicate interaction of
my feedback systems is thrown into disarray by the time lags. Just as one is
rendered close to speechless by a delayed or echoic hearing of one's speaking
voice so, for instance, I am virtually unable to track a moving object with my
eyes whenever my brain and my body are more than a few miles apart. In most
matters my impairment is scarcely detectable, though I can no longer hit a slow
curve ball with the authority of yore. There are some compensations of course.
Though liquor tastes as good as ever, and warms my gullet while corroding my
liver, I can drink it in any quantity I please, without becoming the slightest
bit inebriated, a curiosity some of my close friends may have noticed (though I
occasionally have feigned inebriation, so as not to draw attention to my unusual
circumstances). For similar reasons, I take aspirin orally for a sprained wrist,
but if the pain persists I ask Houston to administer codeine to me in vitro. In
times of illness the phone bill can be staggering.
But to return to my adventure. At length, both the doctors and I were
satisfied that I was ready to undertake my subterranean mission. And so I left
my brain in Houston and headed by helicopter for Tulsa. Well, in any case,
that's the way it seemed to me. That's how I would put it, just off the top of
my head as it were. On the trip I reflected further about my earlier anxieties
and decided that my first postoperative speculations had been tinged with panic.
The matter was not nearly as strange or metaphysical as I had been supposing.
Where was I? In two places, clearly: both inside the vat and outside it. Just as
one can stand with one foot in Connecticut and the other in Rhode Island, I was
in two places at once. I had become one of those scattered individuals we used
to hear so much about. The more I considered this answer, the more obviously
true it appeared. But, strange to say, the more true it appeared, the less
important the question to which it could be the true answer seemed. A sad, but
not unprecedented, fate for a philosophical question to suffer. This answer did
not completely satisfy me, of course. There lingered some question to which I
should have liked an answer, which was neither "Where are all my various and
sundry parts?" nor "What is my current point of view?" Or at least there seemed
to be such a question. For it did seem undeniable that in some sense I and not
merely most oh me was descending into the earth under Tulsa in search of an
atomic warhead.
When I found the warhead, I was certainly glad I had left my brain behind,
for the pointer on the specially built Geiger counter I had brought with me was
off the dial. I called Houston on my ordinary radio and told the operation
control center of my position and my progress. In return, they gave me
instructions for dismantling the vehicle, based upon my on- site observations. I
had set to work with my cutting torch when all of a sudden a terrible thing
happened. I went stone deaf. At first I thought it was only my radio earphones
that had broken, but when I tapped on my helmet, I heard nothing. Apparently the
auditory transceivers had gone on the fritz. I could no longer hear Houston or
my own voice, but I could speak, so I started telling them what had happened. In
midsentence, I knew something else had gone wrong. My vocal apparatus had become
paralyzed. Then my right hand went limp--another transceiver had gone. I was
truly in deep trouble. But worse was to follow. After a few more minutes, I went
blind. I cursed my luck, and then I cursed the scientists who had led me into
this grave peril. There I was, deaf, dumb, and blind, in a radioactive hole more
than a mile under Tulsa. Then the last of my cerebral radio links broke, and
suddenly I was faced with a new and even more shocking problem: whereas an
instant before I had been buried alive in Oklahoma, now I was disembodied in
Houston. My recognition of my new status was not immediate. It took me several
very anxious minutes before it dawned on me that my poor body lay several
hundred miles away, with heart pulsing and lungs respirating, but otherwise as
dead as the body of any heart- transplant donor, its skull packed with useless,
broken electronic gear. *I he shift in perspective I had earlier found well nigh
impossible now seemed quite natural. Though I could think myself back into my
body in the tunnel under Tulsa, it took some effort to sustain the illusion. For
surely it was an illusion to suppose It was still in Oklahoma: I had lost all
contact with that body.
It occurred to me then, with one of those rushes of revelation of which we
should be suspicious, that I had stumbled upon an impressive demonstration of
the immateriality of the soul based upon physicalist principles and premises.
For as the last radio signal between Tulsa and Houston died away, had I not
changed location from Tulsa to Houston at the speed of light? And had I not
accomplished this without any increase in mass? What moved from A to B at such
speed was surely myself, or at any rate my soul or mind--the massless center of
my being and home of my consciousness. My point of view had lagged somewhat
behind, but I had already noted the indirect bearing of point of view on
personal location. I could not see how a physicalist philosopher could quarrel
with this except by taking the dire and counterintuitive route of banishing all
talk of persons. Yet the notion of personhood was so well entrenched in
everyone's world view, or so it seemed to me, that any denial would be as
curiously unconvincing, as systematically disingenuous, as the Cartesian
negation, "non sum "
The joy of philosophic discovery thus tided me over some very bad minutes or
perhaps hours as the helplessness and hopelessness or my situation became more
apparent to me. Waves of panic and even nausea swept over me, made all the more
horrible by the absence of their normal body- dependent phenomenology. No
adrenaline rush of tingles in the arms, no pounding heart, no premonitory
salivation. I did feel a dread sinking feeling in my bowels at one point, and
this tricked me momentarily into the false hope that I was undergoing a reversal
of the process that landed me in this fix--a gradual undisembodiment. But the
isolation and uniqueness of that twinge soon convinced me that it was simply the
first of a plague of phantom body hallucinations that I, like any other amputee,
would be all too likely to suffer.
My mood then was chaotic. On the one hand, I was fired up with elation of my
philosophic discovery and was wracking my brain (one of the few familiar things
I could still do), trying to figure out how to communicate my discovery to the
journals; while on the other, I was bitter, lonely, and filled with dread and
uncertainty. Fortunately, this did not last long, for my technical support team
sedated me into a dreamless sleep from which I awoke, hearing with magnificent
fidelity the familiar opening strains of my favorite Brahms piano trio. So that
was why they had wanted a list of my favorite recordings! It did not take me
long to realize that I was hearing the music without ears. I he output from the
stereo stylus was being fed through some fancy rectification circuitry directly
into my auditory nerve. I was mainlining Brahms, an unforgettable experience for
any stereo buff. At the end of the record it did not surprise me to hear the
reassuring voice of the project director speaking into a microphone that was now
my prosthetic ear. He confirmed my analysis of what had gone wrong and assured
me that steps were being taken to re- embody me. He did not elaborate, and after
a few more recordings, I found myself drifting off to sleep. My sleep lasted, I
later learned, for the better part of a year, and when I awoke, it was to find
myself fully restored to my senses. When I looked into the mirror, though, I was
a bit startled to see an unfamiliar face. Bearded and a bit heavier, bearing no
doubt a family resemblance to my former face, and with the same look of spritely
intelligence and resolute character, but definitely a new face. Further self-
explorations of an intimate nature left me no doubt that this was a new body,
and the project director confirmed my conclusions. He did not volunteer any
information on the past history of my new body and I decided (wisely, I think in
retrospect) not to pry. As many philosophers unfamiliar with my ordeal have more
recently speculated, the acquisition of a new body leaves one's person intact.
And after a period of adjustment to a new voice, new muscular strengths and
weaknesses, and so forth, one's personality is by and large also preserved. More
dramatic changes in personality have been routinely observed in people who have
undergone extensive plastic surgery, to say nothing of sex- change operations,
and I think no one contests the survival of the person in such cases. In any
event I soon accommodated to my new body, to the point of being unable to
recover any of its novelties to my consciousness or even memory. The view in the
mirror soon became utterly familiar. That view, by the way, still revealed
antennae, and so l was not surprised to learn that my brain had not been moved
from its haven in the life- support lab.
I decided that good old Yorick deserved a visit. I and my new body, whom we
might as well call Fortinbras, strode into the familiar lab to another round of
applause from the technicians, who were of course congratulating themselves, not
me. Once more I stood before the vat and contemplated poor Yorick, and on a whim
I once again cavalierly flicked off the output transmitter switch. Imagine my
surprise when nothing unusual happened. No fainting spell, no nausea, no
noticeable change. A technician hurried to restore the switch to ON, but still I
felt nothing. I demanded an explanation, which the project director hastened to
provide. It seems that before they had even operated on the first occasion, they
had constructed a computer duplicate of my brain, reproducing both (he complete
information- processing structure and the computational speed of my brain in a
giant computer program. After the operation, but before they had dared to send
me off on my mission to Oklahoma, alley had run this computer system and Yorick
side by side. The incoming signals from Hamlet were sent simultaneously to
Yorick's transceivers and to the computers array of inputs. And the outputs from
Yorick were not only beamed back to Hamlet, my body; they were recorded and
checked against the simultaneous output of the computer program, which was
called "Hubert" for reasons obscure to me. Over days and even weeks, the outputs
were identical and synchronous, which of course did not prove that (hey had
succeeded in copying the brain's functional structure, but the empirical support
was greatly encouraging.
Hubert's input, and hence activity, had been kept parallel with Yorick's
during my disembodied days. And now, to demonstrate this, they had actually
thrown the master switch that put Hubert for the first time in on- line control
of my body--not Hamlet, of course, but Fortinbras. (Hamlet, I learned, had never
been recovered from its underground tomb and could be assumed by this time to
have largely returned to the dust. At the head of my grave still lay the
magnificent bulk of the abandoned device, with the word STUD emblazoned on its
side in large letters --a circumstance which may provide archeologists of the
next century with a curious insight into the burial rites of their ancestors.)
The laboratory technicians now showed me the master switch, which had two
positions, labeled B. for Brain (they didn't know my brain's name was Yorick)
and H. for Hubert. The switch did indeed point to H. and they explained to me
that if I wished, I could switch it back to B. With my heart in my mouth (and my
brain in its vat), I did this. Nothing happened. A click, that was all. To test
their claim, and with the master switch now set at B. I hit Yorick's output
transmitter switch on the vat and sure enough, I began to faint. Once the output
switch was turned back on and I had recovered my wits, so to speak, I continued
to play with the master switch, flipping it back and forth. I found that with
the exception of the transitional click, I could detect no trace of a
difference. I could switch in mid-utterance, and the sentence I had begun
speaking under the control of Yorick was finished without a pause or hitch of
any kind under the control of Hubert. I had a spare brain, a prosthetic device
which might some day stand me in very good stead, were some mishap to befall
Yorick. Or alternatively, I could keep Yorick as a spare and use Hubert. It
didn't seem to make any difference which I chose, for the wear and tear and
fatigue on my body did not have any debilitating effect on either brain, whether
or not it was actually causing the motions of my body, or merely spilling its
output into thin air.
The one truly unsettling aspect of this new development was the prospect,
which was not long in dawning on me, of someone detaching (he spare--Hubert or
Yorick, as the case might be--from Fortinbras and hitching it to yet another
body--some Johnny- come- lately Rosencrantz or Guildenstem. Then (if not before)
there would be two people, that much was clear. One would be me, and the other
would be a sort of super- win brother. If there were two bodies, one under the
control of Hubert and the other being controlled by Yorick, then which would the
world recognize as the true Dennett? And whatever the rest of the world decided,
which one would be me f Would I be the Yorick- brained one, in virtue of
Yorick's causal priority and former intimate relationship with the original
Dennett body, Hamlet? That seemed a bit legalistic, a bit too redolent of the
arbitrariness of consanguinity and legal possession, to be convincing at the
metaphysical level. For suppose that before the arrival of the second body on
the scene, I had been keeping Yorick as the spare for years, and letting
Hubert's output drive my body--that is, Fortinbras --all that time. The Hubert-
Fortinbras couple would seem then by squatter's rights (to combat one legal
intuition with another) to be the true Dennett and the lawful inheritor of
everything that was Dennett's. This was an interesting question, certainly, but
not nearly so pressing as another question that bothered me. My strongest
intuition was that in such an eventuality I would survive so long as either
brain- body couple remained intact, but I had mixed emotions about whether I
should want both to survive.
I discussed my worries with the technicians and the project director. The
prospect of two Dennetts was abhorrent to me, I explained, largely for social
reasons. I didn't want to be my own rival for the affections of my wife, nor did
I like the prospect of the two Dennetts sharing my modest professor's salary.
Still more vertiginous and distasteful, though, was the idea of knowing that
much about another person, while he had the very same goods on me. How could we
ever face each other? My colleagues in the lab argued that I was ignoring the
bright side of the matter. Weren't there many things I wanted to do but, being
only one person, had been unable to do? Now one Dennett could stay at home and
be the professor and family mark while the other could strike out on a life of
travel and adventure--missing the family of course, but happy in the knowledge
that the other Dennett was keeping the home fires burning. I could be faithful
and adulterous at the same time. I could even cuckold myself--to say nothing of
other more lurid possibilities my colleagues were all too ready to force upon my
overtaxed imagination. But my ordeal in Oklahoma (or was it Houston?) had made
me less adventurous, and I shrank from this opportunity that was being offered
(though of course I was never quite sure it was being offered to me in the first
place).
There was another prospect even more disagreeable: that the spare, Hubert or
Yorick as the case might be, would be detached from any input from Fortinbras
and just left detached. I hen, as in the other case, there would be two Dennets,
or at least two claimants to my name and possessions, one embodied in
Fortinbras, and the other sadly, miserably disembodied. Both selfishness and
altruism bade me take steps to prevent this from happening. So I asked that
measures be taken to ensure that no one could ever tamper with the transceiver
connections or the master switch without my (our? no, r~/)9) knowledge and
consent. Since I had no desire to spend my life guarding the equipment in
Houston, it was mutually decided that all the electronic connections in the lab
would be carefully locked. Both those that controlled the life- support system
for Yorick and those that controlled the power supply for Hubert would be
guarded with fail- safe devices, and I would take the only master switch,
outfitted for radio remote control, with me wherever I went. I carry it strapped
around my waist and--trait a moment-- here it is. Every few months I reconnoiter
the situation by switching channels. I do this only in the presence of friends,
of course, for if the other channel were, heaven forbid, either dead or
otherwise occupied, there would have to be somebody who had my interests at
heart to switch it back, to bring me back from the void. For while I could feel,
see, hear, and otherwise sense whatever befell my body, subsequent to such a
switch, I'd be unable to control it. By the way, the two positions on the switch
are intentionally unmarked, so I never have the faintest idea whether I am
switching from Hubert to Yorick or vice versa. (Some of you may think that in
this case I really don't know who I am, let alone where I am. But such
reflections no longer make much of a dent on my essential Dennettness, on my own
sense of who I am. If it is true that in one sense I don't know who I am then
that's another one of your philosophical truths of underwhelming significance.)
In any case, every time I've flipped the switch so far, nothing has happened.
So let s give it a to....
"THANK GOD! I THOUGHT YOU'D NEVER FLIP THAT SWITCH! You can't imagine how
horrible it's been these last two weeks --but now you know; it's your turn in
purgatory. How I've longed for this moment! You see, about two weeks ago--excuse
me, ladies and gentlemen, but I've got to explain this to my . . . um, brother,
I guess you could say, but he's just told you the facts, so you'll
understand--about two weeks ago our two brains drifted just a bit out of synch.
I don't know whether my brain is now Hubert or Yorick, any more than you do, but
in any case, the two brains drifted apart, and of course once the process
started, it snowballed, for I was in a slightly different receptive state for
the input we both received, a difference that was soon magnified. In no time at
all the illusion that I was in control of my body--our body--was completely
dissipated. There was nothing I could do--no way to call you. YOU DIDN'T EVEN
KNOW I EXISTED! It's been like being carried around in a cage, or better, like
being possessed--hearing my own voice say things I didn't mean to say, watching
in frustration as my own hands performed deeds I hadn't intended. You'd scratch
our itches, but not the way I would have, and you kept me awake, with your
tossing and turning. I've been totally exhausted, on the verge of a nervous
breakdown, carried around helplessly by your frantic round of activities,
sustained only by the knowledge that some day you'd throw the switch.
"Now it's your turn, but at least you'll have the comfort of knowing I know
you're in there. Like an expectant mother, I'm eating--or at any rate tasting,
smelling, seeing--for two now, and I'll try to make it easy for you. Don't
worry. Just as soon as this colloquium is over, you and I will fly to Houston,
and we'll see what can be done to get one of us another body. You can have a
female body--your body could be any color you like. But let's think it over. I
tell you what--to be fair, if we both want this body, I promise I'll let the
project director flip a coin to settle which of us gets to keep it and which
then gets to choose a new body. That should guarantee justice, shouldn't it? In
any case, I'll take care of you, I promise. These people are my witnesses.
"Ladies and gentlemen, this talk we have just heard is not exactly the talk I
would have given, but I assure you that everything he said was perfectly true.
And now if you'll excuse me, I think I'd--we'd--better sit down".
The story you have just read not only
isn't true (in case you wondered) but couldn't be true. The technological feats
described are impossible now, and some may remain forever outside our ability,
but that is not what matters to us. What matters is whether there is something
in principle impossible--something incoherent--about the whole tale. When
philosophical fantasies become too outlandish--involving time machines, say, or
duplicate universes or infinitely powerful deceiving demons--we may wisely
decline to conclude anything from them. Our conviction that we understand
the issues involved may be unreliable, an illusion produced by the vividness of
the fantasy.
In this case the surgery and microradios described are far beyond the present
or even clearly envisaged future state of the art, but that is surely "innocent"
science fiction. It is less clear that the introduction of Hubert, the computer
duplicate of Yorick, Dennett's brain, is within bounds. (As fantasy mongers we
can make up the rules as we go along, of course, but on pain of telling a tale
of no theoretical interest.) Hubert is supposed to run in perfect
synchronicity with Yorick for years on end without the benefit of any
interactive, corrective links between them. This would not just be a great
technological triumph; it would verge on the miraculous. It is not just that in
order for a computer to come close to matching a human brain in speed of
handling millions of channels of parallel input and output it would have to have
a fundamental structure entirely unlike that of existing computers. Even if we
had such a brainlike computer, its sheer size and complexity would make the
prospect of independent synchronic behavior virtually impossible. Without the
synchronized and identical processing in both systems, an essential feature of
the story would have to be abandoned. Why? Because the premise that there is
only one person with two brains (one a spare) depends on it. Consider what
Ronald de Sousa has to say about a similar case:
When Dr. Jekyll changes into Mr. Hyde, that is a strange and mysterious
thing. Are they two people taking turns in one body? But here is something
stranger: Dr. Juggle and Dr. Boggle too, take turns in one body. But they are
as like as identical twins! You balk: why then say that they have changed
into one another? Well, why not: if Dr. Jekyll can change into a man as
different as Hyde, surely it must be all the easier for Juggle to change
into Boggle, who is exactly like him.
We need conflict or strong difference to shake our natural assumption that to
one body there corresponds at most one agent.
--from "Rational Homunculi"
Since several of the most remarkable features of "Where am I?" hinge on the
supposition of independent synchronic processing in Yorick and Hubert, it is
important to note that this supposition is truly outrageous--in the same league
as the supposition that somewhere there is another planet just like Earth, with
an atom-for-atom duplicate of you and all your friends and surroundings,* or the
supposition that the universe is only five days old (it only seems to be much
older because when God made it five days ago, He made lots of instant
"memory"-laden adults, libraries full of apparently ancient books, mountains
full of brand-new fossils, and so forth).
The possibility of a prosthetic brain like Hubert, then, is only a
possibility in principle, though less marvelous bits of artificial nervous
system may be just around the corner. Various crude artificial TV eyes for the
blind are already in existence; some of these send input directly to portions of
the visual cortex of the brain, but others avoid such virtuoso surgery by
transmitting their information through other external sense organs--such as the
tactile receptors in the fingertips or even by an array of tingling points
spread across the subject's forehead, abdomen, or back.
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