kneemos wrote: » Our only hope for survival is to download our brains onto something which can last the thousands of years it will take to get to another habital planet and reasemble ourselves when we get there.
kneemos wrote: » Thought there was some work being done on organic computers. Who knows where that ends up,given time it may even be faster,stronger and smarter than a human brain.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » But it wouldn't be you. 2020 is when we'll have silicon with the same number of connections as the human brain. Thing is that we won't be able to emulate a brain until we understand how it works and that is a long way off.
kneemos wrote: » Even 10,000 years from now is just a blink in our evolution.
crazy cabbage wrote: » we will have long blown ourself to bits in 10,000 years time :rolleyes:
kneemos wrote: » Do you want me to build the spaceship and send you the plans.It's an idea.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » But it wouldn't be you.
Wibbs wrote: » Cool link to the gut nuerons Cú Giobach. Didn't know about that. Funkaay. I've long been of the opinion that who we are doesn't magically stop where the brain meets the rest of the body. IMHO our whole body gives rise to "us", from the fingertips to bacteria in your gut. The brain is by far the most important part, the hub of all that, but if we were just a brain in a jar we'd lose a lot of what makes us individuals. This would explain why in some cases(apparently it's not that rare either) people who recieve transplanted organs appear to get vague echoes of the donor coming with them. With some the changes have been quite obvious, even personality changes. IMHO it's because they've been interfaced with another "me" just at a lower level. So fill out that donor card folks, cos I reckon more than just the cells will live on in some way.
kneemos wrote: » Our past also dictates how we react to the present,based on past experiences and memorys.So it's a bit more than just a vague memory link.
Bipolar Joe wrote: » Yes, I hate it here. I;d give anything to be in space. Seems like bliss.
kneemos wrote: » I'd be more concerned about a meteor strike,a volcanic caldera,a worldwide virus,loss of natural resources or an ice age.
Wibbs wrote: » True enough CM, but then again you might argue you're not really you either over time, merely the continuation of memory believing you are/were.
3ndahalfof6 wrote: » the brain can survive for over a thousand years in the right host.
Biggins wrote: » We will need the carpenters again! (Fellow oldies will get it!)
Wibbs wrote: » Not really. It's all a memory link. "I burned my hand when I touched a flame yesterday, I remember that, therefore I won't touch a flame today". The interesting bit is the "I". Over the course of a day the mechanism behind the "I" is barely changed, however take that out to the distance between a five year old discovering that Flame = burn and the "same" 80 year old avoiding flames because of that memory. The changes to the mechanism of "I" has changed radically. The physical links between the two states is tenuous enough considering how sure we all are that the "me" of today is the same "me" that had these self aware thoughts when we were 10. Essentially we're a whole new mechanism, but the "I" remains, or the illusion of the "I" remains. My point was that we may be able to transfer the "I" to another mechanism if that continuity/illusion is maintained. To do it we "just" have to figure out what that continuity is.
Rabies wrote: » Clearly you have 1000yrs of scientific data to prove this, right Doc?
3ndahalfof6 wrote: » of course.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » We are our conciousness. It's like a running program can ask the operating system to move arms and legs but doesn't know how the OS works, and the OS mostly ignores the program and does it's own thing till there is a request.
BewareTeleportation is murder ![/SIZE]
Wibbs wrote: » Ah but you can effectively shut down the running programme through deep sleep, anesthesia, or the extrme, deep coma, yet when the programme reboots it's still you.
Interestingly it's not just tied to memory as due to brain trauma some rare individuals can have no long or short term memory. They can't recall who they are, or were, every 5 minutes is a surprise to them, yet they know they're them looking out. So it seems it's not just continuation of memory, nor is it an unchanging brain as the brain changes radically throughout life(esp in the early years), or through massive head trauma, yet we always remain "I", the ghost in the machine. Maybe it's one of those global holographic thingies you linked to? That so long as enough of the "I" hologram remains, you feel like "I".
crazy cabbage wrote: » Also what the hell are these nanobots that people keep talking about? I think that you have gone crazy my friend. How a computer and your brain work are completly different. So how do you attach a computer to your brain and share data between the two in any meaningfull way? Again the memories being backed up or whatever. how would this be done bearing in mind what i said above. Even if this was 100% right and we could do it today if we wanted there is majour moral/spirtual/philosical questions that must be asked. Not least is what would you do? you are now in essance a computer with full axcess to everything. you phisical body has died so there is no need to eat and drink and have sex and work. what would you do. Actully would it even be possible for you to experience emotion when this 'switch over' happens. I dout it. so whatever you do decided to do you would feel no pleasure from it I would rather take my chance at death/reincarnation/whatever the **** happens when we die.
MOC88 wrote: » As far as the nano bots meant I meant it as a way of ensuring against cell breakdown and process of aging- IF it is ever possible - nano bots are minature robots
MOC88 wrote: » why not live for a few million years rather than whatever your brain dictates
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » our immune system is comprised of organic nanobots that have been carefully tuned over the last 500,000,000 years are genetically programed to recognise your uniqueness. And they still get it wrong. If you live long enough you have a one in three risk of cancer. If you lived beyond three score and ten the risk goes up faster. Unless you can slow down human metabolism drastically - and that's going to be hard since primates have been restricted mostly to the tropics since the time of the dinosaurs - individuals won't be able to travel to the stars using current physics. Robots with human memories might go, but a long way off. Mammals aren't designed to be sent on seed ships. Teeth made mammals successful but at the cost of dentists , most other animals have teeth that constantly regrow or use gizzards.
crazy cabbage wrote: » Weather or not this will be possible in the furture is hear say. I think you did ask the right question though Here is where there will be difference of opinion and where my problems with this idea start. The reason that there is value to life is becouse it is short. Becouse our time is limited. If we all had an unlimited amount of time then would it be worth it. I couldn't imigine living for 'a few million years'. To me that would be hell. You mentioned going off to see the universe. I imagine that it a beautiful place and the reason that you wish to go there but but beauty is all around us if we can just open our eyes and see it. And i want to die. I dont mean to be morbid and i hope i will not for a while yet but death is he final unexplored frounteer. It is something that everyone must enter alone and deal with alone. It is an adventure that can not be deprived of anyone. What happens after death. Who knows? But that makes it all the more exciting! And even if nothing happens you will atleast know that you spent a natural amount of time on earth and hopefully contributed something to your fellow man and made the world a better place And you will now biodegrade into dust and all the nutrions in your body will enter the earth from which new life can seed itself. What you are suggesting seems so un-natural. It seems to go against every moral/philophisoacl/meatphical/spirtual thought that i have ever had. Is what you are suggesting possible? That doesn't matter. This debate has to center around the spirtual/moral/whatever questions. Do we really want this??