teleporter-problems
Explanation
The Joke
A woman asks a man whether he would use a teleporter that destroys your body at point A and recreates it at point B across the solar system. He immediately says "Nope." She tries to argue that a person is just a pattern through space and time, and when that pattern is "blown up" (destroyed at point A), you are dead — the copy at point B is a duplicate, not "you." He agrees this is troubling. She then tries a different angle: "What if there's a threesome on the other end?" He instantly replies, "Okay, I'm in."
The Humor
The comic plays on the classic philosophical thought experiment about teleportation and personal identity — whether a teleported copy of you is really "you" or just a clone while the original dies. This is a serious problem in philosophy of mind. The man rationally rejects the teleporter because he agrees the copy would not truly be him, meaning he would effectively die. However, the woman then offers the prospect of a threesome waiting at the destination, and he immediately abandons his philosophical objections. The humor lies in the contrast between the gravity of the existential question ("Is the teleported version really me?") and the triviality of the incentive that overrides it. It satirizes how easily people will set aside deep concerns when sufficiently motivated by base desires.