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Yes, but...
“How do we determine identity conditions for hybrid organisms that are built of both
natural and synthetic components and may have components that do not exist in
the natural world, and do not function like anything in the natural world?”
In other words, what the hell are we making in synthetic biology? When are these
synthetic things members of some kind or the same kind? When do the things that are
being made have ethically relevant properties – i.e., life, organismhood? Who owns
the genetic recipe for a particular synthetic creation when the materials that constitute
it and the laws for their combination existed long before it was put together by so and so?
For example, take some arbitrary, artificial nano-device, AND, (for delivering some
DNA).
The matter composing AND is identical with AND, right? AND just is the matter it
is constituted of. AND and the quantity of matter that compose AND are identical
the same way that a statue and the clay it is made from are identical. The
following claims are true, at least intuitively:
Similarly:
And so on for a long list of predicates or properties. But AND can be destroyed
by some event e (say, dissolution by enzyme X). However, the exact atoms that
constitute AND aren't destroyed by such dissolution, they just get spread over an
area larger than AND took up. The quantity of matter that made up AND still
exists and AND doesn't.
How can it be that AND doesn't survive something that the quantity of matter making
up AND does survive, when AND and that quantity of matter are identical?
It is a feature of the concept of identity that if any two things are identical, what is
true of one is true of the other. That's just what “identical” means!
So, if AND and the quantity of matter (QOM) constituting it are identical, then
anything that is true of AND must be true of QOM and vice versa.
But the statement “survives dissolution by enzyme X” is false of AND and true of
QOM! So AND and QOM are not identical.
But that's crazy! That means that AND and QOM, two distinct, separate objects,
were in the same space at the same time before AND was dissolved by enzyme X,
and two things can't be in the same space at the same time! That's just a truism –
it's a fact about the world that we take to be obviously true.
If I buy QOM, and someone comes up with a way to invent AND, who gets to keep it?
If I own a house, and Shelly comes over and paints it or moves some parts of it
around, does Shelly own the house? Or is the changed house a distinct object that
Shelly owns while I own the original house? Who gets to live there?
If AND and QOM are not identical, can I own one and not the other?
If I own AND and QOM, do I still own QOM after AND has been dissolved? Do I have
partial ownership of anything that uses parts of QOM afterward?
The AND-QOM antinomy has the exact same structure as the classic Statue-Clay
antinomy. In fact, there are many “paradoxes of identity” that share similar features.
Statue-Clay:
On Monday, a sculptor buys a lump of clay. On Tuesday, the sculptor shapes it
into a horse – the clay is now a statue of a horse. On Wednesday, the sculptor
(inexplicably) gets tired of horses and smushes the still-soft statue back into a
nondescript lump of clay. On Monday, the clay existed. On Tuesday, the statue
and the clay existed. On Wednesday, the clay still exists, but the statue
doesn't.
Let's introduce variables (briefly) to talk about it. If x and y are identical, then
everything true of x must be true of y. Now, let's substitute the statue for x and
the lump of clay for y. If the statue and the clay are identical, then everything
true of the statue must be true of the clay. It is true of the statue that smushing
destroys it, but it is not true that smushing destroys the clay. So the statue and
the clay are not identical!
Ship of Theseus:
There is a famous ship (from some city, maybe it was Theseus). It is
made from planks of wood harvested from a particular forest, A.
Eventually, it is housed in a museum to preserve it. Over time, the
planks rot and are replaced, one by one, with wood planks from a
different forest, B. Eventually, the ship in the museum is made up of
entirely B-planks. Is this the same ship as the original? It is not true that
the original ship was made of B-planks, but it is true of the ship in the
museum that it is made of B-planks. Vice versa for A-planks. The A-
planks are in a different place than the original ship, so the original ship
is not identical with the planks that made it up.
These four situations all produce an antinomy because the conclusions that we
are compelled to draw from them are inconsistent with the obvious truth that no
two, distinct objects can occupy the same space at the same time. Let's call
this...
In the Statue-Clay scenario, the statue, x, and and the lump of clay, y, are in the
same place at the same time.
In the Dion-Theon case, Dion and Theon are in the same place at the same time.
In the Ship case, the A-planks are in a different place than the original ship after
the replacement. Before, they are in the same space as the original ship.
We have good reasons to believe in the four non-identity theses. And OOSP is
obviously true. Obviously. This is trouble. The non-identity theses can't be
true if OOSP is true and vice versa. So what can we do?
Let's focus on the Statue-Clay case, because it has the basic form that we are
looking for. The argument leading us to believe that the state and the clay are
not identical is this:
*Absurd! The conjunction of the conclusion of the argument and the fact that S
and L are in the same place conflicts with OOSP.
The first thing to notice is that there are assumptions underlying the
previous argument:
(Or, more naturally but circularly: x and y are identical only if they
have exactly the same properties.)
Depending on what assumption we reject, we get a different solution to the
antinomy.
OOSP is false. It turns out that more than one object CAN occupy the same
space at the same time. The clay and the statue are two separate objects
that occupy the same space at the same time. We can prove they're not
identical. The same goes for a book and the quantity of paper that make it
up. And a table and the quantity of wood that make it up. Everywhere we
think we see a single object, we actually see at least two: the object and the
amount of matter that constitute it. The other assumptions of the antinomy
actually constitute an argument against OOSP.
Reasons to accept COT:
The arguments for the non-identity of familiar objects and their matter can be
stated in something like a general form like so:
Defending P2:
- Persistence conditions
i.) x is destroyed by an event e
ii.) the quantity of matter making up x is not destroyed by an event e
- Historical properties
iii.) x did not exist at t1, does exist at t2, and does not exist at t3
iv.) the quantity of matter making up x existed at t1, existed at t2, and
existed at t3
These pairs of statements can be substituted into for most arbitrary objects,
so most objects are not identical to the matter making them up.
COT resolves the antinomy by just removing one of the two ideas that are in
conflict.
Is there a reason to rule these other objects out other that isn't
anthropocentric?
2. Impenetrability: Try walking through a wall or a table or a laptop. You
can't occupy the same space! Toss a baseball at a tv. No occupying the
same space! OOSP is just true!
The JMT says that the statue is not created when the clay is sculpted. We
really ought to identify the statue with the quantity or “hunk” of matter it is
made of from the very beginning – and that matter existed long before the
sculpting. The statue is never actually created – it just is the hunk of matter
that eventually makes it up and it has whatever properties the hunk of matter
has at any given time. It's also incredibly rare that matter is destroyed, too.
Since the statue is identified with the hunk of matter, the statue actually
survives anything that the hunk of matter survives, including smashing,
exploding, and being strewn across the galaxy. And the antinomy is avoided
because there is only the hunk of matter in statue form or in clay form or in
some form in any space at a given time.
Reject Existence → Eliminativism/Nihilism (EN)
Reduce objects to the fundamental particles that make them up. There is no
additional entity that exists in addition to the particles. The antinomy doesn't
come up because there aren't multiple objects in the same space, there are
just n fundamental particles distributed about a certain area.
Both JMT and EN say that all of the properties of objects are explained by the
fundamental things that objects are made of. The only disagreement is over
whether we should talk about those objects existing in a literal or a figurative
sense. (The difference between JMT and EN is held by some to be merely
verbal – a disagreement about whether the statement “statues exist” is true
that depends on language more than on the way the world is. The view that
the entire debate about identity conditions is all just a verbal mess is called
Deflationism. It's complicated, I'm going to skip it.)
Reasons for accepting JMT and EN:
The views are suggested by the success that physical science has had
reducing things to configurations of matter. We just supplement the idea
of everything being made of matter by identifying certain quantities of
matter with objects that we are more familiar with or eliminating those
familiar objects from the category of things that really exist. Either
seemingly resolves the antinomy.
A potential objection to both views might be that objects both exist and
are created and destroyed. Isn't that obvious? To say that objects never
come into our out of being, either because they exist wherever their
matter is or because they never actually exist is equally absurd as
denying OOSP. I can see and feel objects and watch them take shape
and lose it. JMT/EN proponents can respond by saying that that doesn't
mean that there are objects “over and above” the objectlike
configurations of particles or quantities of matter. Sensory evidence
does not distinguish between n fundamental particles and n particles
plus the object itself. Just like sensory evidence doesn't tell between
being on Earth or being a brain in a vat.
Reasons for rejecting JMT:
If objects just are the hunks of matter they are made of, then not only are they
not created by changing shape, they are not destroyed. This is problematic.
The statue survives being smashed? What about a person? Does a person
survive a dramatic change in the hunk of matter that makes it up like exploding
or otherwise dying? Socrates died thousands of years ago and his matter is
dispersed. The Just-Matter theory implies that Socrates is still around.
But, both of these conclusions are just about as absurd as the idea that two
things can occupy the same space at the same time, so a theory that entails
them is no better alternative.
Reasons to reject EN:
Even though sensory evidence can't directly show that EN is false, it is still
hard to swallow – as hard as the idea of more than one object to a space –
and that counts against it.
Since OOSP states that it is absurd that more than one object can occupy the
same space, we can resolve the antinomy by supposing that the clay ceases
existing when the statue begins existing. This is the Takeover Theory. The
statue takes over the quantity of matter that was the clay.
What determines whether a particular object takes over a lump of matter after
an event or a change depends on the kind of object that the matter was just
prior (the “dominant kind” of object). A lump of matter controlled by statue-kind
(arranged so that it is a statue) must retain statue shape or else something else
takes over. A lump of matter controlled by person-kind could be taken over by
corpse-kind if certain changes happen to it.
Reasons to accept TT:
Allows for creation and destruction in the statue-clay case, which are
intuitively plausible.
It's highly implausible that a lump of clay can be destroyed by an act like
sculpting it into a statue.
Even with the rule about kinds determining persistence conditions, it's
unclear when a change or event destroys an object because it's unclear
when one kind is dominant over another.
Weird cases: Imagine that we start treating a rock like a work of art –
displaying it in galleries, writing essays about it. If this makes the rock a
piece of art, then it destroys the rock. But how can looking at and talking
about a rock in a certain way destroy a rock?
Rejecting OOSP (again) → Four Dimensionalism (4-D)
We can answer some objections to COT with 4-D. Maybe that makes
the 4-D version of COT worth believing.
Time is like space – objects can have parts in different locations in space
and in time. My arm is in a different location than my nose. The legs of
the table are in a different space than the table top. 4-D just holds that
one object can have different parts in time. We call different parts
different objects.
The statue is just the temporal part of the clay that is statue shaped.
The clay has other parts too – temporal parts where it is lump shaped.
4-D could solve the grounding problem by saying that the difference in non-
categorical properties of the statue and the lump are grounded in the fact that
they are different temporal parts. I'm not sure what this means.
4-D doesn't resolve the Explosion problem, it accepts it. In fact, 4-D takes
Explosion farther. Each change takes place over time and each instant of
time is a new temporal part. In fact, we can think of arbitrary temporal parts.
We can carve up any object into 14 second long temporal parts. This is still
an absurd conclusion, and there is no nonanthropocentric and intuitive way of
ruling out new temporal parts, each of which is a new object. If this is
implausible, it counts against 4-D.
Also, there is the chance that the image of time being like space might fail in
favor of another image. Maybe it's just not right to think of time like space.
Lumpl and Goliath. Two objects with all of the same temporal parts.
Rejecting Liebniz' Law → Relative Identity Theory (RIT)
More generally: x is the same F as y and y is the same F as x, but x and y are
different Gs, and it doesn't make sense to just say that “x is the same as y”.
Think of the Debtors' paradox: Dion is the same kind, person, as Theon even
though they are distinct in other ways – they have different masses, they have
different lists of parts.
It solves some problems quickly and to intuitive satisfaction; the statue-clay, the
debtors, Dion-Theon... and all problems with their exact structure.
Reasons to reject RIT:
That is, Liebniz' Law is successfully captured in logic, and it is pretty useful,
but RIT has us reject it.
The crucial idea: The keys to resolving the antinomy are i.) knowing that there
are assumptions underlying the antinomy and ii.) systematically and carefully
thinking about what is being assumed and how those assumptions inferentially
relate to the conclusions. Exposing the assumptions requires figuring out how
they support the inconsistent statements.
But... rejecting some of the assumptions will have consequences, and this is
what distinguishes the various theories of identity. We have to figure out which
consequences we are willing to live with and which ones we aren't.
These ideas hold for just about everything that can be debated. It's good to
carefully think about the assumptions and inferential connections for any
problem.
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