Kinda dark, but interesting. And since Agora has been going on for so
long and doesn't seem like it will stop anytime soon, even thought it
would be sad, it's not a complete impossibility.
On 10/29/2018 12:58 PM, Timon Walshe-Grey wrote:
This randomly occurred to me recently.
Rule 869/44 indicates that a dead organism is not a person, because it is not capable of
thinking. So if an organism who was a player died, e would cease to be a person and COULD
NOT be a player any longer. But this is not the same as "deregistering",
because that is the act of flipping a Citizenship switch to Unregistered, and non-persons
do not have Citizenship switches. Are there rules that would malfunction if this happened?
Non-persons also cannot have Patent Titles, Ribbons etc, so we have a potential
loss of historical information in Herald, Tailor and Registrar reports. Not to
mention that dying could cause someone to cease to be a party to a contract
that would otherwise prohibit em from doing so.
R2350 says:
Creating a proposal adds it to the Proposal Pool. Once a proposal is created,
nether its text nor any of the aforementioned attributes can be changed. The
author (syn. proposer) of a proposal is the _person_ who submitted it.
(emphasis mine) If the organism that was once the author of a proposal dies,
then that proposal's author is now undefined, which is a change in one of the
aforementioned attributes. So the rule is self-contradictory! Same for
co-authors.
Regulations Promulgated by an organism cease to be Regulations when the
organism dies.
And what if an Auctioneer or vote collector dies?
Perhaps Rule 869 should be amended to state that any people continue to be
people in perpetuity even if they stop meeting the definition of a person.
-twg