Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
A struggling CIA consultant fights for survival after a secretive and morally corrupt government agency forces him to kill his team by overwriting his consciousness with that of an assassin's.
While intriguing, version 3.0 of my consciousness is confused about the premise. If the CIA consultant's consciousness has been overwritten, hasn't it ceased to exist? And if so, while there would be a CIA consultant's body, there would no longer be the original consciousness to "fight for survival"Read more
While intriguing, version 3.0 of my consciousness is confused about the premise. If the CIA consultant’s consciousness has been overwritten, hasn’t it ceased to exist? And if so, while there would be a CIA consultant’s body, there would no longer be the original consciousness to “fight for survival”.
Or do both consciousnesses co-exist in the same brain-body? In which case you have an interesting twist on the Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde.
Please clarify.
See lessA struggling CIA consultant fights for survival after a secretive and morally corrupt government agency forces him to kill his team by overwriting his consciousness with that of an assassin's.
While intriguing, version 3.0 of my consciousness is confused about the premise. If the CIA consultant's consciousness has been overwritten, hasn't it ceased to exist? And if so, while there would be a CIA consultant's body, there would no longer be the original consciousness to "fight for survival"Read more
While intriguing, version 3.0 of my consciousness is confused about the premise. If the CIA consultant’s consciousness has been overwritten, hasn’t it ceased to exist? And if so, while there would be a CIA consultant’s body, there would no longer be the original consciousness to “fight for survival”.
Or do both consciousnesses co-exist in the same brain-body? In which case you have an interesting twist on the Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde.
Please clarify.
See lessAfter hospital negligence leaves her son profoundly brain-injured, a mother consumed by anger risks alienating him as she struggles to let go of the boy he might have been and accept the boy he has become.
And I find more interesting the mother son relationship. Different strokes.
And I find more interesting the mother son relationship. Different strokes.
See less