Digital Doppelgängers and Lifespan Extension: What Matters?

Journal: The American journal of bioethics : AJOB
PMID:

Abstract

There is an ongoing debate about the ethics of research on lifespan extension: roughly, using medical technologies to extend biological human lives beyond the current "natural" limit of about 120 years. At the same time, there is an exploding interest in the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to create "digital twins" of persons, for example by fine-tuning large language models on data specific to particular individuals. In this paper, we consider whether digital twins (or digital doppelgängers, as we refer to them) could be a path toward a kind of life extension-or more precisely, a kind of extension-that does not rely on biological continuity. We discuss relevant accounts of consciousness and personal identity and argue that digital doppelgängers may at least help us achieve some of the or ostensible goods of person-span extension, even if they may not count as literal extensions of our personhood on dominant philosophical accounts. We also consider accounts of personhood and discuss how digital doppelgängers may be able to extend personhood in a relational sense, or at least secure some of the goods associated with relevant relationships. We conclude by suggesting that a research program to investigate such issues is relevant to ongoing debates about the ethics of extending the human lifespan.

Authors

  • Samuel Iglesias
    University of Oxford.
  • Brian D Earp
    Philosophy, Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA brian.earp@yale.edu.
  • Cristina Voinea
    Department of Philosophy and Social Sciences, Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, Romania.
  • Sebastian Porsdam Mann
    University of Oxford.
  • Anda Zahiu
    University of Bucharest.
  • Nancy S Jecker
    Department of Bioethics and Humanities, University of Washington, School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA nsjecker@uw.edu.
  • Julian Savulescu
    2Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.