Recent voluntary
euthanasia hullabaloos such as the
Terry Schiavo case have revealed a public that’s largely divided and somewhat confused as to what
death
is and when it should actually be declared. This issue is set to get
increased attention as a) more people vie for increased control over
their right to die, b) our medical sensibilities migrate increasingly
toward a neurological understanding of what it means to be ‘alive’ in a
meaningful sense, and c) the realization that the potential for
cryonics and other advanced neural rescue operations will give rise to
an
information theoretic interpretation as to when death should truly be declared.
It
is customary to declare death when the heart stops beating. This only
makes sense; in the past it was the practical thing to do given limited
medical know how. Moreover, without ever having the phenomenon of an
individual in a coma or on life support, there was no need to have an
alternative conception as to when it was appropriate to declare death.
Modern
technologies have twisted this practicality, however, by introducing
devices that keep people alive biologically while their brains have
essentially stopped working. Individuals ‘living’ in these persistent
vegetative states are a particularly macabre sight: corpses that are
hooked up to machines so that the blood can keep flowing.
Of
course, some people today don’t see it quite this way. Many cling to
the notion that life can’t possibly come to an end until the heart
stops, or that some kind of ensoulment or dignity is maintained until
all biological
functioning ceases. In many cases, despite irrevocable damage to the
brain (the word ‘persistent’ is used for good reason), many hold out
for some sort of divine intervention or miraculous medical intercession.
These
perspectives, however, fail to take into account personhood-based
conceptions of what it means to truly be alive. Unless one is capable
of ongoing subjective engagement with the world, one is not a person.
Conscious existence is a necessary condition for agency, and because
the brain generates consciousness, it’s fair and reasonable to suggest
that we
are our brains. When a brain is damaged or
malfunctioning beyond repair, then the person who owns that brain
should really be considered deceased.
If, on the other hand, a
cognitively impaired condition is not permanent (i.e. someone in a
temporary coma) and the integrity of higher brain functioning has been
maintained, a person should not be declared dead. In this sense, there
is still cause for hope because the fruits that can give rise to a
conscious person are still intact.
This is what is referred to
as an information theoretic interpretation of life and death.
Functionalist and materialist conceptions of brain activity suggest
that conscious individuals are the sum of their brain patterns. These
patterns are expressed by tangible and measurable parts of the brain.
Consequently, the ‘information’ that’s encoded in the brain and in
constant flux
is the person.
As long as the information in the brain remains intact (i.e. the
software), and provided the brain is functioning properly so that
information can be computed and expressed (i.e. the hardware), a person
should be considered alive – or in some cases, alive in the sense that
consciousness and active personhood can be resumed at a later time.
Information theoretic death has deep implications for those interested in
cryonics or the potential for
mind uploading.
Given the possibility for cryonic reanimation or a transferred
existence into a different computational substrate, an alternative
legal and medical definition of death would seem to be in order.
The
argument goes as follows: If biological functioning stops for an
individual, but the brain’s information can be perfectly restored and
recovered at a later date, a person should not be considered
permanently dead. Death, therefore, should only be declared when the
information state of the brain is so disorganized that recovery is
impossible.
Currently, when considering the status of an
individual preserved in cryonic storage, it is not known beyond a
shadow of a doubt that reanimation is impossible. In fact, with each
passing year the strength of the hypothesis favouring such a
possibility strengthens. Practically speaking then, cryonauts are dead
-- but they have a non-zero potential for resuming life in the future.
Consequently, I’m in favour of an immediate change to our sensibilities as they pertain to the declaration of
permanent
death -- but I know that most of society isn’t quite ready for
information theoretic death just quite yet. It will take some time
before people start to acknowledge the importance of preserving the
brain’s informational essence beyond biological death.
The day
will come, however, when information theoretic death will become the
established and legal standard for declaring a person’s permanent
death. At such a time it will be information theorists rather than
medical doctors who will be the ones declaring when life has truly
ended.
Cross-posted from
Sentient Developments.