Identifying enhancement boundaries where modifications preserve the sense of continuous self rather than creating discontinuous identity shifts.
Philosophical enhancement raises a profound question: at what point does modification break continuity of self? Laozi's teaching on natural transformation—where change is gradual, aligned with internal logic—suggests that sustainable enhancement preserves subjective identity continuity. Radical modifications that feel alien create psychological fragmentation. The threshold of self-recognition varies: some neural modifications enhance felt identity (better memory, clearer thought), while others fragment it (divergent cognitive subsystems, altered personality). This framework uses phenomenology—the *felt* sense of being yourself—as a measure alongside objective capability gains. An enhancement that doubles IQ but makes you unrecognizable to yourself may be inferior to a modification that increases creativity while preserving continuity. Biotech applied to identity should ask: does this change feel like *more* of who you are becoming, or like becoming someone else? This aligns with wu wei—natural change that unfolds from existing patterns—rather than forcing ruptures. Ethical enhancement respects both capability gain *and* narrative continuity of self.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.