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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
This may pose and interesting question in the future, but for now you are an integrated whole. You may be able to do without some parts of your body. But you cannot exist without your body or your mind.
The xerox you would not own the flesh body, which would be still owned by the bio-brain, but xerox you would still own its 'silicon self'.
Thus I think that the mind and the body are potentially separable, and any discussion of self-ownership should take this into account.
Jan
There is a world of difference between the right to life and self-ownership. Yes, self-ownership does raise the specter of slavery, but dropping that term and talking only about the right to life ignores the issue of slavery completely. Maybe it even tacitly allows for it.
Only libertarians (in today's political environment) support freedom of both the mind and the body (thought and production).
Both [conservatives and liberals] hold the same premise—the mind-body dichotomy—but choose opposite sides of this lethal fallacy.
The conservatives want freedom to act in the material realm; they tend to oppose government control of production, of industry, of trade, of business, of physical goods, of material wealth. But they advocate government control of man’s spirit, i.e., man’s consciousness; they advocate the State’s right to impose censorship, to determine moral values, to create and enforce a governmental establishment of morality, to rule the intellect. The liberals want freedom to act in the spiritual realm; they oppose censorship, they oppose government control of ideas, of the arts, of the press, of education (note their concern with “academic freedom”). But they advocate government control of material production, of business, of employment, of wages, of profits, of all physical property—they advocate it all the way down to total expropriation.
I think as long as some think af 'themselves' as separate from the lives of their bodies, they're never going to understand or accept the reality of self ownership.