Ishaan comments on an ethical puzzle about brain emulation - Less Wrong Discussion
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Can't find it. Link?
Also, this is a strange coincidence...my roommate and I once talked about the exact same scenario, and I also used the example of a "rock, waterfall, or other object" to illustrate this point.
My friend concluded that the ethically relevant portion of the computation was in the mapping and the waterfall, not simply in the waterfall itself, and I agree. It's the specific mapping that pins down the mind out of all the other possible computations you might map to.
So in asr's case, the "torture" is occurring with respect to the random bits and the encryption used to turn them into sensible bits. If you erase either one, you kill the mind.
A search on LW turns up this: http://lesswrong.com/lw/9nn/waterfall_ethics/ I'm pretty sure the original example is due to John Searle, I just can't find it.
On page 208-210 of The Rediscovery of the Mind, Searle writes: