The bit about the actual 'you' being destroyed when you're copied into a machine, or regrown from a clone vat, or whatever, has always bothered me as well. I don't think society would accept it easily.. in fact, probably not at all. It would be a different experience from the sheer philosophy of it when you're sitting there in a chair with a machine set up around your brain and a syringe of suicide drugs prodding your arm.
An interesting way to get around the conundrum would be just to integrate a small 'recording unit' into the brain. Perhaps it does a few other functions than memory recording, too. But the point is - it doesn't replace 'you'. It becomes a part of you.
Then when you die, the small durable unit is removed, and at least something survives that can be put into a new body. It'd still be a traumatic injury, but recoverable from. The egg of the phoenix, yes?
An interesting way to get around the conundrum would be just to integrate a small 'recording unit' into the brain. Perhaps it does a few other functions than memory recording, too. But the point is - it doesn't replace 'you'. It becomes a part of you.
Then when you die, the small durable unit is removed, and at least something survives that can be put into a new body. It'd still be a traumatic injury, but recoverable from. The egg of the phoenix, yes?