Download Your Brain
Nicholas Roussos writes "Futurologist Dr. Ian Pearson predicts that death will be avoidable in the year 2050 by downloading your brain to a computer. Unfortunately, he is also predicting that the process will be only available to the wealthy for years after its release. I guess we should all start saving our pennies now."
And this guy's a *doctor*? LOL
You know, like a photocopy. What's the point, you'd still be dead.
Deleted
This time they aren't kidding. Just hope your brain runs Linux.
...to the blue screen of death.
The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination
- Douglas Adams
Futurologist is a cool title. I wish I'd invented it myself. Looking at any prediction anyone makes upon the future that far out is, well, ludicrous. This man is 'looking' 75 years into the future. If you look 75 years back you see: The Great Depression The Rise and Fall of Communism The Rise of the Computer The creation of massive individualized transportation Just to name a few. Great. But projecting things that far out doesn't quite deal with the possibility that this was an anomaly in human history. He's making assumptions based upon a dozen factors that psychics ARE more qualified to look at. Example from TFA: The Playstation 5 will be as powerful as the human brain. How could this not be him talking out of his rear end? 2020? People, as a rule, don't follow lines straight enough that you can figure out what they're going to be doing tomorrow. When someone predicts a phenomenon like BitTorrent 20 years ahead of time, I'll listen to them. Until then, well, you're just blowing steam. As for avoiding death, well, let's just say that IF a supergenius computer driven by 'emotion' suddenly appears, I personally will convince it that immortal humans are the best companions for it from the command line. Then we'll wait a week and suddenly teh supar majikul mind-to-computer link will suddenly put me inside as wil_e_coyote_super_Genius.o I get the cool filename. You heard the dibs here.
My little site.
He picked those numbers for his theory because he'll be dead by then.
The end.
Oh yay, so Bill Gates gets to be immortal as well as evil.
"What are we going to do this millenium, Bill?"
"Same as we do every millenium, Ballmer..."
Search in eMule for the brain of the guy that screwed Jennifer Lopez or something.
www.lemonodor.com A mostly Lisp weblog
I doubt you're going to get any sex when you're in a computer, either.
Woo. A random prediction by a 'futurologist'.
Must be true then.....
what about my consciousness? I'd like to think I'm more than just the information patterns in my brain.
The Blaster Master Fighting for Truth, Justice, and Evil Pie since 1979
...they forgot the -p flag when dumping it, and people will be restored with no moral codes.
The question on my mind is, how can you have your conscious self be in two places at once? If it would ever be possible for this, then I would think that the real power would not be longevity of life but in being able to copying ones self and retaining a kind of collective consciousness over a large array of machines.
This is too much into the realm of metaphysics to talk about now. There is not enough factual data yet. We need to learn much much more about the human brain before we can approach such technology. Otherwise, talking about it sounds more like techno song lyrics than real science.
I didn't RTFA, but downloading my experiences to a computer ain't the eternal life I was looking for. I'd like a biological solution, thank you very much.
Are you serious? No, really, since when can one make up a title for themselves in a made up profession and start posting made up studies to a reputable news site?
Its like the Star Trek transporter beam, the copy of you transported to the new location is fine, but what about the original which is obliterated in the process?
This way to the egress...
I can't wait till they take the downloaded brains' intelligence and implement them into games. I wanna have a pet GWB! Or blow one away in Halflife 30
Ok - so you can get it FROM the brain... how do you get it back into ANOTHER brain?
Get Paid to search
I don't think a COPY of yourself would give any kind of immortality to YOU...
It might do so to the COPY of you (assuming they also solve the problem of bit-rot...)
Uh, your memory engrams may be downloadable, but your consciousness and soul will die right along with your body.
"What happened to the rest of me?!!"
The real question is will this process record just the senses or will it also record the underlying processing construct ie:personality of the person who is being scanned.
"If you draw the timelines, realistically by 2050 we would expect to be able to download your mind into a machine, so when you die it's not a major career problem,'
Coworker A: Hey, where's Bill? Is he in today?
Coworker B: Oh, Bill died yesterday.
Coworker A: Gee, that's too bad. So he'll be back in tomorrow, yeah?
Coworker B: Probably. He's on track for that promotion, so he won't want to take too much time off...
doesnt that confuse the meaning of death?
your body will be dead but not the mind.
Making a copy of yourself doesn't avoid death for you, it just means ongoing life for a copy of you.
This is not a subtle point.
Anyone who cannot grasp this either hasn't thought deeply about a subject, or is an idiot. Anyone who uses the title "futurologist" is likely the latter.
FP!
Let's Slashdot the servers while those rich bastards are downloading their brains. That will show them!
Though there are the weird cases, like where sub-parts of the brain are gradually replaced by cybernetic equivalents. At one end of the process you have a purely organic mind, and at the other end a purely silicon (or whatever) one. At what point along that spectrum (if any) does the original person die?
Reminds me of this story.
PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
Am I the only one who would be scared if the plane I'm flying in started to show emotion? I mean, what if it has a bad day and turns off the seat-belt signs while going through turbulance and I spill my coffee? Or what if it realizes it's a machine in service of man and goes on a Jihad or what have you. I'll take dumb machines, thank you.
Futurologist is a cool title. I wish I'd invented it myself.
Looking at any prediction anyone makes upon the future that far out is, well, ludicrous. This man is 'looking' 75 years into the future.
If you look 75 years back you see:
The Great Depression
The Rise and Fall of Communism
The Rise of the Computer
The creation of massive individualized transportation
Just to name a few. Great. But projecting things that far out doesn't quite deal with the possibility that this was an anomaly in human history. He's making assumptions based upon a dozen factors that psychics ARE more qualified to look at.
Example from TFA: The Playstation 5 will be as powerful as the human brain.
How could this not be him talking out of his rear end? 2020? People, as a rule, don't follow lines straight enough that you can figure out what they're going to be doing tomorrow.
When someone predicts a phenomenon like BitTorrent 20 years ahead of time, I'll listen to them. Until then, well, you're just blowing steam.
As for avoiding death, well, let's just say that IF a supergenius computer driven by 'emotion' suddenly appears, I personally will convince it that immortal humans are the best companions for it from the command line. Then we'll wait a week and suddenly teh supar majikul mind-to-computer link will suddenly put me inside as wil_e_coyote_super_Genius.o
I get the cool filename. You heard the dibs here.
My little site.
with a much better headline
The wealthy will be able to download their consciousness into computers by 2050 - the not so well off by "2075 or 2080", claims futurologist Dr. Ian Pearson, head of the Futurology unit at BT.
While it sounds like science fiction, Pearson is serious about his claim. He believes that humans will achieve a kind of virtual immortality by saving their consciousnesses into computers within the next 45 years.
"If you draw the timelines, realistically by 2050 we would expect to be able to download your mind into a machine, so when you die it's not a major career problem,' Pearson told The Observer. "If you're rich enough then by 2050 it's feasible. If you're poor you'll probably have to wait until 2075 or 2080 when it's routine. We are very serious about it. That's how fast this technology is moving: 45 years is a hell of a long time in IT."
Dr. Pearson's background is in applied mathematics and theoretical physics. The 44-year-old spent 4 years working on missile design and the last 20 working with optical networks, broadband network evolution and cybernetics.
He thinks that today's younger generation will benefit from the advances in technology to the point that death will be effectively eliminated. He explains his logic with a simple example.
"The new PlayStation is 1 per cent as powerful as a human brain," he said. "It is into supercomputer status compared to 10 years ago. PlayStation 5 will probably be as powerful as the human brain."
He isn't talking about pure data here. Pearson believes that the human consciousness can be stored in digital format.
"We don't know how to do it yet but we've begun looking in the same directions, for example at the techniques we think that consciousness is based on: information comes in from the outside world but also from other parts of your brain and each part processes it on an internal sensing basis. Consciousness is just another sense, effectively, and that's what we're trying to design in a computer. Not everyone agrees, but it's my conclusion that it is possible to make a conscious computer with superhuman levels of intelligence before 2020."
'It would definitely have emotions - that's one of the primary reasons for doing it. If I'm on an airplane I want the computer to be more terrified of crashing than I am so it does everything to stay in the air until it's supposed to be on the ground.
'You can also start automating an awful lot of jobs. Instead of phoning up a call center and getting a machine that says, "Type 1 for this and 2 for that and 3 for the other," if you had machine personalities you could have any number of call staff, so you can be dealt with without ever waiting in a queue at a call center again.'
Pearson also considers the implications of such machines on our lives. He believes that before the creation of these new "smart" machines, there should be a national debate.
"You need a completely global debate. Whether we should be building machines as smart as people is a really big one. Whether we should be allowed to modify bacteria to assemble electronic circuitry and make themselves smart is already being researched."
'We can already use DNA, for example, to make electronic circuits so it's possible to think of a smart yoghurt some time after 2020 or 2025, where the yoghurt has got a whole stack of electronics in every single bacterium. You could have a conversation with your strawberry yogurt before you eat it.'
The conscious computers wouldn't be the first step in the process. Pearson believes the process called 'ambient intelligence' will be the next phase in the progress.
"For example, if you have a pollen count sensor in your car you take some antihistamine before you get out. Chips will come small enough that you can start impregnating them into the skin. We're talking about video tattoos as very, very thin sheets of polymer that you just literally stick on to the skin and they stay there for several days. You could even build in cellphones and conne
I doubt that this will ever happen, since we still don't know much, if anything, about how the brain even WORKS, let alone trying to access, copy, and replicate everything our brain stores. I just don't see how this is possible at all...even far in the future.
NOT if I hold on to a copy of WSTFP_LE and Putty for 50 years, it won't!
Cover your eyes and click this link!
NEVER do a backup without a working restore !
I thought this was supposed to be 'News for Nerds', not 'Speculation for Halfwits'...
From TFA:
OK...so where does that put the Xbox?
Seriously, this 'explanation' of his 'logic' leaves much to be desired...but there's more.
Also from TFA:
Hmm...but what if the AI is a thrillseeker? Suicidal? Psychotic? What if it suddenly develops acrophobia? If we're going to have a true AI with emotions, these are issues that need to be addressed, don't you think?
Here's another few nuggets from TFA:
Well, that 'completely global debate' should be ready by the release of PlayStation 5...
'Smart yoghurt'? Sure I guess it's possible to think of that...about as possible as it is to think of magical elves, unicorn-riding gnomes, and smart futurologists.
One thing conspicuously missing from this article is speculation over the possible legal status of either a true AI or a downloaded brain. Apparently, that paragraph got bumped in favor of 'smart yoghurt'.
In short, this is the dumbest thing I've heard all day (and I work in IT support). I'm sure that if Dr. Pearson didn't already have such a sweet position as 'head of the Futurology unit at BT', he could make good money writing speculative fiction...or reading palms.
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Hey, remember when Ray Kurzweil said this 5 years ago?
Badass Resumes
Discuss.
People who say things like this don't understand how the brain works. It is intimately tied to the body.
It is NOT like a hard drive.
Look up some readings on embodied cognition and neuroscience.
You'd have to "download" the state of every cell in the body to effectively save the state of a person such that it may possibly be re-simulated sometime.
"Unfortunately, he is also predicting that the process will be only available to the wealthy for years after its release. I guess we should all start saving our pennies now." I for one will wait for openbrain.sourceforge.net.
Unfortunately, this can only be accomplished by inserting a giant metal spike into the back of the head, via an implanted receptacle.
from what I know about the brain, it would be near impossible to store all the data, as we do not use most of our brain and every cell gets replaced after X amount of time. it is amazing that we are able to retain the data (maybe the majority of our brain is making copies before the cells die).
I read the article and its comments. check out the comment labeled "Holographic brain", it almost sounds like it will work.
what I don't get, is it sounds like you will be 'body dead' and only be able to live in a computer and from parts of that article, I got that you would end up doing some shitty call center job - and I doubt you'd have much control (especially when a larger/faster computer process would control your life).
do you have shinyfeet?
Much like thier server.
"Imagine a Beowulf cluster of my brain"
-- Boycott Shell
There is no plausible way for replicating the structure and billions of individual minute biological connections present in the brain. Making such a promise is a good way to garner interest and sell your books and speeches to a gullible public. Particularly, a rich gullible public.
Unlike ones and zeros represented on a medium for a computer's use, there is no steady-state representation for the human mind.
At last! We'll be another step closer to creating the Kwisatz Haderach!
What I want to know is if you can download other people's brains back into you, while your brain is backed up on some server somewhere. Maybe we could start a P2P service for swapping brain patterns!
Guy asked me for a quarter for a cup of coffee. So I bit him.
Scientists have recently downloaded Paris Htilton's brain to Commodore 64.
Ok Ok, not original so sue me.
*** STOP: 0x0000001E (0xC0000005,0x8016A950,0x00000001,0x00000086)O DE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED*** Address 8016a950 has base at 80100000 - ntoskrnl.exe
KM
CPUID:AuthenticAMD 5.6.2 irql:1f SYSVER 0xf0000565
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fdaec000 3360f103 - srv.sys
Address dword dump Build [1381] - Name
f206fba4 8016a950 8016a950 00000001 00000086 00000086 00000086 - ntoskrnl.exe
f206fbd0 80115d86 80115d86 00000000 ff87a400 ff87a3f0 ff810408 - ntoskrnl.exe
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f206fc10 8011bd6a 8011bd6a ff676980 ffffffff 34f9ad10 00000000 - ntoskrnl.exe
f206fc38 8011bcce 8011bcce ff676980 ffffffff 34f9ad10 00000000 - ntoskrnl.exe
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f206fc88 801163e3 801163e3 ff876f58 ff676980 ffffffff 00000000 - ntoskrnl.exe
f206fca4 f1f88825 f1f88825 ff876f58 ff676980 ffffffff ff876f38 - i8042prt.sys
f206fcc8 80117f93 80117f93 ff6c7328 ff876bf0 00000000 801126af - ntoskrnl.exe
f206fcd8 801126af 801126af 00000246 80112717 ff6c7328 00000103 - ntoskrnl.exe
It's not the information that the human brain stores which makes it unique, it's the way we process it and the interconnections between different bits of knowledge. For example, my grandmother neuron happens to be linked to my blueberry pie neuron, when I think of her, I recall blueberry pies (which she loved to make.)
So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
Alright, so you've download my brain into a giant (or perhaps in my brain's case small) computer bank. Sure, why not.
Will I than be able to "upload" my brain into a new body? A new cloned body? A completely new body?
If not, since my brain is just stored somewhere is it completely read only, or will my brain have an interface to the world, ie living through the computer? If not, why not. If so, why would I want to be uploaded back into a body?
Sure, I'll nod my head and say why not that you'll be able to download the entire human brain into a computer. But there are far to many other questions which would involve far to much more work to say this is a viable alternative for the rich.
And on another note, seeing as harddrives crash on me like nobodies business, we'd need a more reliable medium than what is currently available today.
-Teiresias
Auugh... men already have enough trouble with their women saying "You said $X before! I remember you saying it!" :)
This gives the females of our species an unfair advantage, as now they can pull the memory right off of your hard drive.
Ray Kurzweil predicted this in Spiritual Machines (not affiliate link) 5 years ago.
Cory Doctorow's "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom" for a real look at benefits, problems and misuses inherent in a system like this.
Available on-line at: http://craphound.com/down
After I have gone, young people will come with new ideas, new dreams, new problems. They will require the (intellectual) space fat ass rich guys will claim for their eternal life. I do not believe I have achieved enough in this world for my mind to persist past my body. All good things come to an end, and this includes me!
10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then
...is not to become immortal, but to have a backup brain for when something happens to your original.
-- Boycott Shell
No, download would be the correct term. You have no facility in your own brain to initiate its upload to a computer.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
I think the problem here is that it's not just a matter of matching the massive calculation and storage capacity of the human brain, but it's also about the underlying mechanisims that make humans intelligently non deterministic.
I read this earlier today, and his statement about aircraft with emotions, so that the plane itself would be more shit scared of crashing than the passengers...
...would we ever get any aircraft off the ground, if this was the case?
Control Tower: "Come on flight 3587f, you have to take off now"
flight 3587f: "Nope, I am staying RIGHT HERE, and nothing you can do will make me..."
Control Tower: "Pretty Pleaseeeeeeeee"
flight 3587f: "Nope!"
...
Comment removed based on user account deletion
into a computer (linux preferably). Then I dont have to worry about this body craping out on me.
The Doormat
If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
If you're stupid enough to believe this guy, then the contents of your brain is already freely available in boxes of ten. ... it's being sold under the pseudonym "blank floppy disks" and they've got all your intelligence 10 times over.
Swing on down to Staples
The *AA condemn the practice, and demands a tax on reproduction (since a new brain is a new hard disk).
Downloaded brains are illegal copies of movies and song seen and heard, and thus infringe the copyright.
-- "If A equals success, then the formula is A=X+Y+Z. X is work. Y is play. Z is keep your mouth shut." - Einstein
"Futurologist Dr. Ian Pearson predicts that death will be avoidable in the year 2050 by downloading your brain to a computer."
Not going to work because humanity is a manistfistation of the machine as it were (emergent behaviour). You can't seperate the two.*
*Yes I know about neural nets, but the human mind is more than a big neural net. Quantum effects may even be involved.
from http://www.gotfuturama.com/Multimedia/EpisodeSoun
IMAGE VERIFICATION IS EVIL!
Anger management classes
Is Professor Frink in charge of this project?
"I predict that within 100 years, computers will be twice as powerful, 10,000 times larger, and so expensive that only the five richest kings of Europe will own them."
If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
I lost my mom when in my early 20's, and my dad a few years ago.
Every once in a while, I wish I could ask them what to do about this or that, what they did when such and such happened, and so forth.
Sort of a Jor'El/Kal'El thing, though I usually don't need to save planets and such.
And when a spouse of 50 years dies, the other would like to talk to them.
It's no way to cheat death, but it is a way for those around you to avoid dealing with the fact that you're gone.
sigs, as if you care.
If it will hold a human mind, it will hold an AI. If rich people will benefit from still being regarded as legally human when stored, then they will push for the kind of laws that will most likely solve the potential AI civil rights problem in the process.
We not so rich people will still have to worry about whether they really are still human. Nobody will have to worry about the legal status of Transhumans, since nothing we can anticipate there matters. What I can't figure out is why there seems to be more fear of HAL-9000 type AIs than really rich guys who have figured out how to stay in control forever.
Who is John Cabal?
Until computers can smoke joints and get a buzz, drink beer and get a buzz, and have orgasms, I won't consider it "living".
In other news, a new "smart bomb" that kills the very rich without harming the poor has been discovered... they call it an EMP.
-1 Uncomfortable Truth
Sounds exactly like the premise of Rudy Rucker's novel, Software. A story of a man who seemingly lives forever, after he downloads his brain to a huge computer. With each passing year "far-fetched" Science Fiction inches closer to reality. I think this really enforces the imaginitive genius of these writers. Progress begins with an idea, and it seems that many of the revolutionary ideas that guide scientific progress were once mere tales of Science Fiction.
Then Google can index brains and insert context based ads!
The thing is, what will they go and download (as someone already mentioned, upload from your brain to computer) your brains to? If you have no control over where they put your deepest thoughts, you may end up being the brains behind a descendant of the ROOMBA!!!! (Now, make sure you come up with a good strategy for getting into every nook and cranny of the kitchen floor, will ya!!!
I have a bumber sticker in my cubicle that says
Who's going to reboot it? What if you don't pay your bill, will you just be on tape somewhere?
Kinda like digital purgatory.
Ocean is land, covered with water.
"I haven't lost my mind; I'm sure it's backed up on tape somewhere."
"Prepare for the worst - hope for the best."
...in his book, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. It's a great, short read. Freely downloadable from http://www.craphound.com/down/.
Refering to 'conscious' computers, Pearson says:"'It would definitely have emotions - that's one of the primary reasons for doing it. If I'm on an airplane I want the computer to be more terrified of crashing than I am so it does everything to stay in the air until it's supposed to be on the ground."
Just what I wanted - the computer flying the plane to be terrified. Panic is so useful for that task.
Also FTA: 'You can also start automating an awful lot of jobs. Instead of phoning up a call center and getting a machine that says, "Type 1 for this and 2 for that and 3 for the other," if you had machine personalities you could have any number of call staff, so you can be dealt with without ever waiting in a queue at a call center again.'
Once again, the thought of talking to a computer with an attitude so appeals to me.
And, of course: "PlayStation 5 will probably be as powerful as the human brain."
I think he must have experimented on his own brain - "This is your brain. This is your brain on windows."
Apparently he's been watching the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex series on Adult Swim.
In addition to the brain-puter, he has predicted that the future will also have power-hungry bending robots with a penchant for booze, smoking and thievery.
Korby: Why I'm just as human as ever! Ask me to solve any equa.... uh... I can factor the most complex... er...
He points his phaser at "himself": ZAP
Spock: Where is Dr Korby?
Kirk: Dr Korby... was never here.
Classic!
And once you have the chemical composition and the electrical composition, you ALSO need to know the wiring - the wiring between the neurons is unique to an individual, and isn't going to be easy to determine.
Ok, so now you have all of the core information. Is it still useful? Well, no. You now need to know the physical layout of the brain - all the folds, the exact proximity of A to B, that sort of thing.
Ok, is THIS enough? Still no. You still lack information on sensory input. You need to know what the range is on different nerves, because the brain is going to adjust to what the nerves deliver. If you don't know what the nerves deliver, then you don't know what sort of data the brain is expecting.
NOW, is that enough? No. You need to know what the data is that is being fed into the brain. For example, those with tetrochromatic vision will be getting data in a whlly different format from those with trichromatic vision, and both will be different from those with bichromatic vision.
Once you have all of this information, you MAY be able to reconstruct a person's brain well enough to be able to function identically. The keyword is MAY. As technology improves, our knowledge of the brain is improving. It is still seriously incomplete, but it is improving. There is so far no proof that we will ever know enough to actually duplicate the brain, although there is also no proof that we won't. All we have proof of, right now, is that we can't, right now.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
...like this. It of course doesn't say anything about when brain downloads are likely to become available. But it does say a lot about how out of touch with reality so-called experts are. Of course when your job is such that closing the quality control loop takes longer than your lifetime it's only to be expected that your work might not have the same quality expected from people working in other fields.
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
The year 2000 has already passed. Where is my flying car? Where is my Linux box that has 50% market share? This article is total B.S. and should never have been posted to the front page. Further, with something as complicated as the brain, how can the author go about making predictions for an organ that scientists aren't even close to understanding?
Finally, if you are worried that only the wealthy will be able to afford this luxury, start a mutual fund and add $1000 to it every year. At 12% growth, the fund will reach $1.7 million by 2050. You'll be able to afford the procedure at that time.
But you'd be programmed to not notice that your brain was replaced with a shell script. All it would need to do was "frist psot" and "in Soviet Russia" jokes!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Downloading your brain is all fine and dandy, but will we have flying cars by then?
...to have my entire brain moved into a biomechanical body (in 50 years or so it may well be possible). This way I get to be sure that I'm still me and also, that I won't be left kicking around some computer system in storage until somebody finds me a proper body. Barring any issues surrounding brain damage this seems like a much nicer idea to me.
Silly rabbit
So when will they have the robot bodies? Id put my brain in a robot body... ooooh how about a Tigerbot? I want to be a Tigerbot, like Hesh.
Home of the midwest loser - www.say-10.net
Ahh, thank you for the clarification. I've always wondered why it seemed like the improper term was used half the time.
And you have to fight Mick Jagger! (I'm sorry. I really should not have made anyone else remember this movie.)
by William Gibson
He turned on the tensor beside the Hosaka. The crisp circle of light fell directly on the Flatline's construct. He slotted some ice, connected the construct, and jacked in. It was exactly the sensation of someone reading over his
shoulder.
He coughed. "Dix? McCoy? That you man?" His throat was tight.
"Hey, bro," said a directionless voice.
"It's Case, man. Remember?"
"Miami, joeboy, quick study."
"What's the last thing you remember before I spoke to you, Dix?"
"Nothin'."
"Hang on." He disconnected the construct. The presence was gone. He reconnected it. "Dix? Who am I?"
"You got me hung, Jack. Who the fuck are you?"
"Ca--your buddy. Partner. What's happening, man?"
"Good question."
"Remember being here, a second ago?"
"No."
"It's the little touches that make a future solid enough to be destroyed" --William S. Bourroughs
OK, so you can copy the class files from wetware to silicon...
However, it will create a new instance of the class.
The instance that inhabits this wetware goes into the bit bucket when the wetware breaks.
Sorry, no immortality to see here, move along citizen...
From Ian's website:
Ian Pearson graduated in 1981 in Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics from Queens University, Belfast. He spent four years in Shorts Missile Systems, in many different disciplines from mechanical engineering to battlefield strategy simulation. He joined BT Laboratories in 1985 as a performance analyst, and has since worked in network design and evolution, cybernetics, and mobile systems. He now concentrates on mapping the progress of new developments throughout information technology, considering both technological and social implications. As BT's futurologist and a principal consultant, he lectures extensively on his futures views. In between conferences, current projects include machine consciousness, NBIC convergence, and advanced computing technology.
He has received ten awards for his papers, written several books and has made well over 250 TV and radio appearances. He is a fellow of both the Royal Society of Arts and the Institute of Nanotechnology. He is married (to Susan) with a daughter (Rachel). He runs a small art group, and enjoys swimming and writing.
I coulda swore this guy was just some overoptimistic kook genuinely believing the stuff he was spewing, but then it dawned upon me: the math obviously got to him, and drove him insane. It could be worse though - he coulda been one of those nuts from the TV show biases team today.
Soon through the miracle of new Bittorrent technology we'll be able to have a group conscious; a hive mind! Sign up to become a borg now! Who wants to start the "seeding" process?
anyone got a .torrent?
I don't moderate anymore. Karma penalty for 90% fair mods? Can I mod that unfair?
You still die.. your knowledge lives on but you still die. So your family may "still have you" but you still goto the great beyond..
I like muppets.
What worries me is, assume that brain is downloaded into machine with some sort of optical (webcam?) device. Could a fragile human mind be capable of watching it's own body die from outside itself?
Of course there will no computers to run it on.
Unless you could after the "upload", download it
to someone else's brain. Of course that brain would
not be the same as your original brain so how would
that work out? Is "ourselves" just the knowledge -
which might be uploadable - or is it the knowledge
and the hardware on which it runs.
I believe most theologies have a concept of
Soul of some sort. Would this Soul be uploaded?
An army of Lucy Lius!
This is hardly avoiding death. A digitized copy of you may continue to exist, but your own perception is that you would still die.
If the the technology is available, and assuming it is a non-destructive copy process, why wait until you die?
You could be sunning yourself on the beach while your computer-brain works in the office 24 hours a day to pay the bills.
Just don't become a Mathologist, because 50 - 5 = 45, not 75.
what sig?
Looks like someone just read it.
We could then borrow against the future value of our stored brain-power and thereby raise enough capital to finance this expensive procedure for the masses.
the computer is a pathway to many abilities that some would consider unnatural
Build Your Own PVR/HTPC news, reviews, &
I'd wind up in a pentium.
Paris Hilton's brain will be available on an old 1.44MB floppy....
We'll have flying cars and 3-second-to-cook Pizza Hut pizzas and holographic previews for the next Jaws movies that jumps out from the screen and tries to eat you from the sidewalk!
If you don't get the reference, you receive no cookies. >8(
from an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie.
I just hope no one bungles or bobbles the fingle dopple.
This is your brain on a Pentium ...
Any questions?
If such is to be avoided, simply downloading the information contained in a brain is just the beginning. Once you've accomplished that, hard as it may be, you would then need to tackle the ridiculously complex problem of associating things properly. This is far (!!) from trivial. Secondly, data in a brain does not life make. Conciousness is the all important aspect, generally speaking. We need computers with the ability to think and be aware of themselves. This, too, is far from trivial. Even if we were able to somehow transfer the contents of our brain into a computer, I am skeptical that the same conciousness would arise. So much more makes up life. It's a bit simple to think that we can transfer our brain's data into a computer and live in perpetuity. However, perhaps by 2050 Google will be doing this for us, too, for a measly price.. kinda like Lasik. As an asise.. I doubt the author of the article is insinuating that we could truly remain alive.. just that our memories would not die with us. Then again.. I didn't RTFA either.
What is your penile percentile?
The computer has already enlarged my penis! Now it can download my brain.
And hey, at least we don't burn out like a lightbulb after a few years./p
I just let out a huge sigh when I read the headline. I haven't read the link, or any replies. I do not intend to. OK. Stop. Please. It WILL happen. But please calm down.
For one, the central goal here is not to download the brain. It is to establish a continuity of consciousness to a machine. We forget things all the time--there is no need to be able to remember everything you would have as a human.
Look at the brain. For some reason people with a keen interest in the future but little knowledge of neuroscience like to say things like "DOWNLOAD THE BRAIN". Philosophers seem to think they suddenly have a detailed knowledge of neuroscience.
You could very likely remove the cerebellum, medulla, and primary motor/sensory cortices. These are better understood and could be either removed or replicated. The spinal cord is technically a part of the CNS, and in fact is quite well understood. This can be removed, as can be seen in how those who have it sliced rather high up don't become zombies. There are many other areas that are understood such as Weirnikie's and Broca's areas mainly through injury studies. Again, people do not become zombies if these areas are compromised.
Please, everyone, learn some neuroscience. Learn lots of science. Science will give the individual complete liberation from any society and money concept. Science, not philosophy.
Transcend Humanity. Please.
You should start saving your pennies now, ANYWAY.
Otherwise you will be broke when you are old, ANYWAY.
Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
- W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
You're assuming that you have a soul floating around that is somehow attached to your body. Using that thinking a perfect copy of a body isn't the same because the soul is lost. Futurology is usually based on trends predicted by science, your conception of a unique soul is not scientific.
If a perfect copy of yourself was made and placed in a chair across the desk from you it would be as real and soulful and deserving of human rights as you. I'd love to someday be able to have a conversation with myself, narcissistic as it sounds. What we experience, if you want to call it that, is user illusion. It's kind of ironic that science is proving something as mythological as fate to be true.
Of course you can't go on believing the truth on a day to day basis and try to remain free of mental institutions so we (including myself) go on believing in free will and heaven and hell, a soul, god, etc. I think as a species we became smart enough that self delusion evolved as a survial technique because truth is subject to the law of diminishing returns when applied to philosophy.
What if Digg added local news and a Slashdot inspired comment karma system? ---
http://houndwire.com
The essays in "The Mind's I" edited by Douglas Hofstadter are also of interest: http://www.cogs.indiana.edu/people/homepages/hofst adter.html
anyone remember that old movie? ... freejack its the name, with emilio stevez, about a backup mainframe to preserve the personality until some fresh body comes up for downloading the soul of the rich & powerful people, man thats a dystopia!!
mod me to -1 for redundancy
Neuromancer, you know, that crazy book that introduced the term "cyberspace" to us all. I cant remember the guys name, but he got all freaked out when Case told him that he was actually dead and only psyche on a computer.
File sharing could present real identity theft issues.
Fortunately, I have the Miracle of Compound Interest working in my favor.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Wow. He is so original. This has been done any number of times. Perhaps the best treatment was in Circuit of Heaven by Dennis Danvers.
Amazon Link
he might want to upgrade his brain first...
We are the Borg. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Resistance is futile.
The Technomancer
"Men of lofty genius when they are doing the least work are most active."-
"It would be most interesting to impress your memory engrams on a computer, doctor. The resulting torrential flood of illogic would be most entertaining."
--Spock, to Dr. McCoy, in "The Ultimate Computer"
The extropians have been using the term "upload" for many years, as has science fiction. It's based on standard use of computer industry terminology.
I routinely use my laptop to initiate either uploads to or downloads from a server. And sometime the server initiates uploads from or downloads to my laptop (e.g., Z-modem). The terminology has nothing to do with which side initiates the transfer. It is a convention based on "up" being "to the (conceptually) bigger system". I certainly don't want to transfer my mind into a system that has less capacity than my current brain, so I want to upload it.
And your "facility" claim doesn't even make sense. My brain does have the facility to initiate an upload, just as much as it has the facility to travel to Australia. My brain can choose to have my body buy an airline ticket and drive to the airport, or just as easily, to drive to an upload center, walk in the door, and sign the appropriate paperwork.
The big questions are whether I will live long for the service to be available, and whether I'll be able to afford it. In his book "The Age of Spritual Machines", Ray Kurzweil makes a reasonably convincing argument that I will, thanks to Moore's Law.
Ray points out that even if Moore's Law runs out of steam with regard to MOSFET technology, that there is good reason to believe that it will apply equally well to new technologies, since the known laws of physics still have "lots of room at the bottom" (as observed by Richard Feynman). He shows that Moore's law actually extrapolates fairly accurately all the way back to late 19th century mechanical calculators.
My prediction is that by 2050 the extremely rich won't have to download their brain, they'll just get a cyborg body.
will be able to download their consciousness into computers by 2050 - the not so well off by "2075 or 2080", claims futurologist Dr. Ian Pearson, head of the Futurology unit at BT."
/. and got his other A&L buds to print it. Or perhaps it's his barber shop dipl0ma d0ct0rate in the social upheavals resulting from the simple overhand knot as misapplied in early French lamb gut scum bag manufacturing. Which reminds me of that fugs tune, Saran Wrap. But I digress and am not to thing the first yet, it being...
The second thing that comes to Senor Programmer, futureologistismo extroadinaires mind is...
Once again those who wait will benefit from the excursions and expense of early adopters. The first thing was tooo involved to type fast and follows with SP's predictions as coda.
Thing the first. Why is it that these arts and letters types, and Ian surely is one, Otherwise he'd be out working on brain loading rather than trying t get his arse in the history books as the prognisticating dude who ripped off my AC comments to
That why the heck is is always "the rich" or "the wealthy" with these A&L futurologists? I'll tell you why. Because it fits their hidden agenda of control through class warfare, that's why. Keep those brain loading researchers in their place by pointing out that they are working for THE MAN and not for the community good. But what does he care? He's a wealthy futurologist. Oh yeh, his position of wealth is both secure and non-suspect if he maintains his position as 'one who knows best' between the evil technocrats, scientists, engineers, and the 'po folk'.
Coda follows as it by definition must.
BZZZZTTTTTTT Ian's full of shit.
First. It's not a matter of 'loading' ones brain into some bit of hardware. It's integration of that hardware into the brain function to the degree that, as has been observed for decades with other prosthetics, the brain ceases to recognize the machine as distinct from itself. As brain function is slowly replaced and integrated there will come a point at which the brain is totally aware of it's self yet that self is totally contained within the hardware which replaced it. WIth the rapidly declining cost of hardware and synthetic diamond for physical interfacing, it's more likely that somone will discover that he has been a machine for many years rather than consciously set out to 'load' his self into that machine. See the machine. Become one with the machine. Be the machine. But in this case, machine becomes you instead.
PS
If anyone is interested in a FOSS hardware-software project that will show up THE MAN and put the first consciousness, I propose a dog because you never know with cats and monkeys tend to toss unpleasant stuff about, in hardware, please let me know. Seriously. Well maybe not the dog part but the ever growing in functionality brain prosthetic would be FUN.
PSS volunteers will be considered in order of descending donor ranking
Even if you download your brain/consciousness into some other device, some electronic device, that device can still fail. In fact, that device (any) device will eventually fail. Every device has a finite chance of failing over some time interval, so according to the laws of probability, if you add up enough of those time intervals, it's absolutely certain that it will eventually fail.
The point being, at the very best (i.e. if it works at all and gives you a decent quality of life), downloading your brain to some computer or whatever will only delay death, not permanently avoid it.
I am not a doctor, but I find it very hard to believe what you say. In fact, I think you're thinking about a human's skin which is replaced on a regular schedule.
There are so many common sense ways to shoot holes in what you say, but I'll wait for someone more knowledge on the subject to respond.
I'm a big tall mofo.
If I could download my brain into a computer, then I probably could surf the Internet at the speed of thought. Could you imagine all the pr0n then!!1 ;)
your consciousness and soul will die right along with your body.
The article said that only the rich will afford this. James Brown is quite wealthy.
As for the article mentioning a plane more terrified of crashing than it's passengers. What if such a plane realized that it's chance of survival was increased by releasing excess cargo, such as let's say, human passengers. I imagine a plane shaking out passengers like a dog shaking off fleas. The obvious answer to this is the 3 laws of robotics. But that brings up an even more imortant dilema. Once a brain has been imported to computer hardware, would it then come under the 3 laws? For us to say that a brain translated into functioning software is still a human mind is a great leap. Part of what makes a human a human is (un)fortunately our mortality is it not? To remove that, could we still be considered human?
Dr. Pearson is 44 years old so, most likely, he'll be gone by 2050.. It's a shame that he won't be able to use his own work to download all of that knowledge before he kicks the bucket.
Then again, I guess it could be just as bad as dying before you find a cure to a disease that you have... only later to have someone else use your work to cure themselves.
thinks it'll happen much sooner than that, you can read his prediction in his book, "Engines of Creation", which is posted online by him at www.foresight.org/EOC .
I think they're on to something...Remember M..M..M..Max Headroom.
I think it's obvious that we will get prosthetic bodies long before prosthetic brains. After all, we know how most of the body works, the brain on the other hand, is still mostly a mystery.
A few concrete examples:
Arm go bye bye.
Get prosthetic arm with elbow, wrist, and hand rotation and close action TODAY.
Leg go bye bye
Get prosthetic leg that runners use who have lost legs.
Half of brain go bye bye.
Go lay down, that's your option.
Headline news, 2062: "In a related story, shares of BizLogix plummeted today on news that its wildly successful "Investment Apprentice" analysis software was based on a pirated copy of Donald Trump." Makes you wonder who'll be making the BitTorrent rounds in fifty years.
"Futurologist Dr. Ian Pearson predicts that death will be avoidable in the year 2050 by downloading your brain to a computer. Unfortunately, he is also predicting that the process will be only available to the wealthy for years after its release. I guess we should all start saving our pennies now." I read that as: "I guess we should all start saving our penises now."
Good point. There is no reason to believe that if the essence of the person's brain were "running" on artificial hardware, it would be any less conscious and be any less convinced that it is, in fact, the same person.
..you have to submit a "brain dump" as part of the pre-employment screening process...???
Three thousand quatloos that the blue screen of death will take on new meaning in the year 2005.
"Star Trek" teleporter? No
"Stargate" teleporter? Yes
Technoli
Downloading the brain is nonsense. That will never be possible.
But maybe once it will be possible to copy the complete brain. But such a perfect copy will not make any sense. That wil have all the imperfections and aging it allready had. That wil die anyway, so what's the use???
Here stands for "Your rights are On the line". Or YBO, "Your Brains are on the line".
What would prevent "governments or terrorists alike" from "using/abusing" this for their greedy goals?
The strongest forms of privacy will be useless.
he next thing is that they will be able to put it back in a new body and "vois las", a cloned GW! or even B*n L*den. More cr*p for every one and their grand children!
A bunch of hormone triggerings and muscle signals? To speak of thoughts, beliefs, reflections or any other mental state as something physical denies the law of identity(A != !(A)). A is not equal to non-A. If anything is true about mental states that isn't true about physical brain activities then mental states are non-physical. As it happens there are many things that are true of one but not the other. For instance, brain components have mass and words do not. Therefore words can't be "in" your brain. The same with beliefs, introspection, etc.
...they forgot the -p flag when dumping it, and people will be restored with no moral codes.
We already have people like that. They are called politicians and are born with no moral codes.
Only to idiots, are orders laws.
-- Henning von Tresckow
...this message is: please notice, that the current topic has had a quite deep coverage in Russian science fiction, here is a link to a recent and, presumably interesting for an international audience, example (in an automatized English translation). (or just use a URL, that has been previously created: http://tinyurl.com/c6grb )
Unless the process worked incrementally over a long time, i.e., every day, 0.1% of your consciousness was transferred to the machine. Your brain would (somehow, magically) be induced to start using that part of the machine as part of the coherent whole. Over time, your "real" brain would be retired as more and more of "you" was run in the artificial brain. Of course, if we could do that, we'd probably be able to make a biological brain last forever and attach whatever cybernetic augmentations we wanted, eliminating the need for this in the first place (except for backups in case of death, in which case there's no ambiguity about whether the real you is a alive or dead).
You have a choice: tax and spend Democrats, or borrow and spend Republicans. Choose wisely.
The TimeLords already download their minds into the Matrix. I think they use the collective minds of all deceased Timelords to predict the future.
I imagine this might have been the inspiration for the movie Matrix because in the Timelord Matrix things look real and you can feel pain but Dr. Who was able to overcame it by fully realizing it was only an illusion.
Think about a person who suffers a head injury -- that person is often not the same person anymore, or suffers problems resulting from it that severely impairs their ability in life. Sometimes a person goes into a comma and never comes out. Not much physical damage to the brain has to occur for big problems to result. Now consider trying to move the contents of the brain. So I have to assume if the other medium is not exactly a brain then copying into it will just create a really big problem.
Even if science can get you onto another medium, consider Reeves (now deceased) or Hawking, trapped in teir own bodies to a degree. Now consider being fully concious and stuck in box. It's a good way to go mad and to never die.
I'm not saying it's not going to happen. I am predicting it's not going to happen in the next several lifetimes.
Why would I want to give my neural contents to someone I don't know, who could later sell them to someone I dislike, to be used as a "mental slave"?
I can think of no better definition of hell than if I were somehow "aware" of what was going on, but powerless to stop it.You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
"Math in a song is good."-Linford
Futurologist is a cool title. I wish I'd invented it myself.
History -> Historian
Future -> Futurian
Much cooler sounding, I think.
My only worry is a system crash. What will I be like if a few ones and zeroes get switched? Maybe I will just forget a few things, OR MAYBE my entire personality will just blue screen ?!? Sounds pretty scary to me! http://www.xmmailserver.com/
- - - Email Application Server http://www.xmmailserver.com
I wonder how this would be a one-way street. I mean, if you can copy info from our brains, then what would stop you from sending info to the brain, or even removing information from the brain?
"First. It's not a matter of 'loading' ones brain into some bit of hardware. It's integration of that hardware into the brain function to the degree that, as has been observed for decades with other prosthetics, the brain ceases to recognize the machine as distinct from itself. As brain function is slowly replaced and integrated there will come a point at which the brain is totally aware of it's self yet that self is totally contained within the hardware which replaced it. WIth the rapidly declining cost of hardware and synthetic diamond for physical interfacing, it's more likely that somone will discover that he has been a machine for many years rather than consciously set out to 'load' his self into that machine. See the machine. Become one with the machine. Be the machine. But in this case, machine becomes you instead."
/. news
Extracted from my earlier rambling comment on instigating
I could see them giving discounts. They could do a rom construct of your brain, but add parts to the construct that leave you craving Coke, Cheetos and Microsoft products for the next 80 years...
Might save 40 or 50 grand on the "sticker" price over a lifetime.
When I restore my computer from a Ghost image, I have no idea what most of the system files are or do. I don't know what needs what to work together correctly. I just know that it *works* when I turn it back on. (Hmm, maybe Microsoft's new slogan should be telling us something about their R&D targets for 2050...)
What would be interesting is finding out where the "system" partitions are in the brain and where the "memories" partitions are, so you could selectively copy and restore (or maybe even upgrade or swap) your consciousness without losing your store of recollections. Plus you could share memories with a friend by just copying them onto on a 1TB thumbdrive or something.
I can't read the article, but from most of the posts quotes makes it look like junk.
That being said, I would think that any working solution would need to address continuity. For example, if the process was removing parts of your brain with a suitable, long lasting replacement and that process did not change your consciousness, then it could be worthwhile.
$witty_sig
The smart yoghurt might be reading this!
Next thing you know your frozen yoghurt will morph into poisin. Then who get the last laugh?
ME! MUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
- Smart Yoghurt
If you believe that we are biological machines and nothing more than that they it is conceivable that we could make other types of machines conscious. I have a fairly heavy background in both electronics and computer programming and I have my doubts.
"If you draw the timelines, realistically by 2050 we would expect to be able to download your mind into a machine"
Computers are great tools for what they do. They manipulate a series of 1s and 0s, store and retrieve the 1s and 0s on various media etc. The one thing that a computer has never done and I don't think ever will is to understand the significant of the stream of 1s and 0s that it is manipulating. That would require true consciousness and TRUE consciousness is part of our minds. It is very different to program a computer to say "I am a computer." than it is for the computer itself to say it AND REALLY UNDERSTAND. No mater how good we get at simulating consciousness I don't believe that we will ever be able to take machine consciousness beyond the simulation into reality.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Oh sure. It'll be your memories, and your deepest, darkest thoughts that you thought you had hidden (People could pry around through that and find all the *bad* things you've done), but it isn't you.
It's not capable of rational thought, or even thought. You won't have the creative element that you have right now as a human. They could stick you with an AI processor which could anticipate and formulate responses based on each person's individual brain, but it's going to come to different conclusions than you would.
For example, say you were given a situation involving a shaky bridge and a very steep cliff that it's attached at either end to. Your normal self would weight in the situation, based on perspective, past life experiences, mood, and forsight, and come up with the answer to if you should cross it based on many human feelings, most notably fear. Whereas the AI module (assuming there is one) might come to a completely different conclusion due to lack of self preservation, too much self preservation, or not being able to properly factor in emotion/fear into the equation.
Thus, it is not you. Your self is lost upon death, while your memories could be used as a database for advanced AI chips. That's all.
By "you," I mean the deceased. This does nothing for the person who died, as that person is irretrievably gone. This would only create a copy. But that copy would still be worth a lot to the husbands, wives, daughters, sons, etc. left behind. It would be better than monetary life insurance. Your employer, for one, would love it. It sure would be a mindjob for the copy, though.
You have a choice: tax and spend Democrats, or borrow and spend Republicans. Choose wisely.
The Outer Limits did a good story once about the more likely form of teleportation.
why is it worth mentioning that some cheesy tv series explored this topic?
This topic of self-copying should certainly be worth considering for every person, seeing as how we are all marching toward certain personal oblivion. But trust me, whatever the Outer Limits scripts have to say about this is hugely irrelevant.
However, on a much more relevant note, it appears that I, Cryofan, am the only poster on this thread who actually has a chance of ever uploading my brain. You see, I have a contract with Alcor to have my brain vitrified in liquid nitrogen until I am able to be revived. I hope to awaken in a future where uploading is available as an option for superlong life and space travel....
eat shiat and bark at the moon
I am sorry, I can't go to war.
Everybody want to upload their brain on the server and it is now slashdotted.
I can't upload mine!!
Good thing I recently developed and patented an algorithm to compress V1. (NOT)
There are just some things that I don't want some script kiddie with a port scanner to be able to find out.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Max Headroom dealt with this, both as an overall concept and as a specific episode of the TV series.
:P
Personally, I think it would be handy - dupe the skillset into a ROM construct and cut the sucker loose on photoshop. He can sit on IRC and CG my comic pages while I write and ink the sucker. Perfect division of labor, creatively speaking.... but I'm one of those creative types who needs multiple instances of himself, not collaborators clouding the idea stream.
You have no more (or less) facility in your own brain for initiating download than upload.
But you do, by manipulating a remote device to pull the data from your brain. Your brain does not need to push. Upload and download are just fancy terms for the pushing and pulling of data from one system to another.
The extropians have been using the term "upload" for many years, as has science fiction. It's based on standard use of computer industry terminology.
Actually more based on a misunderstanding of computer industry terminology. The lesser/greater system originated from people who didn't understand upload/download and were trying to explain -- poorly -- to laymen. At the time, it looked to be correct as they were the common types of systems which uploading and downloading were performed, but it was never the nature nor capacity of the machines involved that determined the terms.
FTP's GET is always a download and its PUT is always an upload, even if the FTP server was on your laptop and you're directing it from a mainframe, and even if that direction is through a Telnet connection from your laptop.
Thus also saying the RIAA and MPAA are only going after "uploaders" is incorrect. Everyone on P2P is downloading, pulling data towards themselves. They are going after servers just as the ATF would go after someone who puts free alcohol, tobacco, or firearms out for unregulated taking by any member of the public. They aren't pushing those products to people, only making them available to be taken in a manner contrary to law.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
This has been extensively covered in "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom" by Cory Doctorow. One of the main outcomes of this "Click yes to save the snapshot of your brain" future is that homicide and suicide will essentially be reduced to the minor inconvenience of losing a week (or more, if you are lazy) of your memories since your last backup. The benefit is that you can selectively build your memories, choosing to self-terminate after a traumatic experience or a painful divorce and restoring from a backup that doesn't contain those memories. The book is a really good read for future futurologists.
The photocopy would be immortal so it could spend the rest of eternity to figure out time travel and then go back in to when my original was still alive and then prevent me from... ...oh wait this is about a copy of me?
Well... Then I hope he chokes on those dorritos and dies of exhaustion of playing to much EQ XXIV instead of setting the time aside to revive me!
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
> You'd have to "download" the state of every cell in the body
Definitely not every cell. You can lose an arm and still be yourself. If you suddenly woke up without both your legs, you would still be the same person. People also get artificial organs, including hearts, and remain themselves. So obviously, only the brain and its contents matter.
Boy on a Stick: Are you eating pie?
Slither: Yes.
Boy on a Stick: Virtually?
Slither: YES. VIRTUALLY!
What does this have to do with brain copying??? Is /. borked today?
Free Mac Mini Yeah, it's
There is no plausible way for replicating the structure and billions of individual minute biological connections present in the brain. Making such a promise is a good way to garner interest and sell your books and speeches to a gullible public. Particularly, a rich gullible public.
(ca. 1880) FUTURIST CLAIMS MANNED FLIGHT WILL BE POSSIBLE BY 1930, though initially cost will limit it to the wealthy.
"There is no plausible way for replicating the structure and billions of individual, minute biological connections present in the wings of a bird. Making such a promise is a good way to garner interest and sell your books and speeches to a gullible public. Particularly, a rich gullible public."
Unlike ones and zeros represented on a medium for a computer's use, there is no steady-state representation for the human mind.
Three points.
1) Quantum computers (and their analogous storage media, if any ever exists) may not require a steady-state representation of the human mind. Certainly the biological computers we call our brains don't require such, yet they manage to store and compute our consciousness in realtime, and reboot our minds at least once a day (we typically call that "waking up").
2) You assume there is no steady state (binary) representation of the human mind. You do not know this for a fact (otherwise, please cite references and evidence). The fact that we may lack the knowledge and technology for captureing such a state today does not mean it is impossible, either theoritecially, or practically given a few decades development.
3) You assume the representation must be binary. That is not necessarilly true. Said computers could be nondigital (either analog hardware in the old sense of the word, or quantum systems manipulating complex waveforms and superpositions), or could represent their data in a non-binary digital format (though the latter would almost certainly decompose into a binary solution).
It may not happen, or it may, but for you to try and "authoritatively" nay-say its possibility demonstrates your own arrogance far more than it does the implausibility of the conjecture. Furthermore, history is littered with literally thousands of naysayers like yourself claiming X is impossible, only to be proven an idiot within a couple of generations.
The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
The movie Dark Star suddenly came to mind:
Pinback wants the bomb to disarm
Pinback: All right, bomb. Prepare to receive new orders.
Bomb#20: You are false data.
Pinback: Hmmm?
Bomb #20: Therefore I shall ignore you.
Pinback: Hello... bomb?
Bomb #20: False data can act only as a distraction. Therefore, I shall refuse to perceive.
Pinback: Hey, bomb?
Bomb #20: The only thing that exists is myself.
Pinback: Snap out of it, bomb.
"Bah!" - Dogbert
It's true, you can't predict specific developments in the future with any kind of accuracy, or by now crime would be wiped out, the motor car would be obsolete and the rainforest would all be gone. And computers would only be owned by the 10 richest Kings of Europe.
o nal)
Real development comes unexpectedly - the spectactular rise of the internet etc
That said, Asimov's fictional science of physchohistory comes across are more plausible. As in a gas, the motion of a single molecule is very difficult to predict, but the mass action of the gas can be predicted to a high level of accuracy. So the actions of individuals make little difference on the progress of society. People behave erractically, but their overall movement can be predicted.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychohistory_(ficti
My other thing to say is a quote from The Mighty Boosh - reminding me in of Futurama.
Vince: I think I might have my hair frozen - let future generations know what's possible
Howard: (something along the lines of) They're going to preserve my head and parade me around at times of special ocassion and ask me for my wisdom.
Vince: Hey, can't they preserve all of you?
Howard: No. It's not like that in the future. Just heads.
To summarise the summary - that prediction is a load of shit.
I think you're making the same mistake as Descartes with mind/body dualism.
:)
After some deep thinking philosophy has mostly moved on from it. Are you really sure you've thought deeply about this and are not an idiot?
1) Pearson is not a Dr. He has a BS in applied physics from some college in Northern Ireland. He has 10 years of experience in networking and none in science or AI, other than writing foolish op-ed pieces for BT.
2) Ask anyone who works in AI what the prospects are of doing what Pearson suggests within a predictable time frame, much less a *century*. Anyone with any integrity will answer, "I have no idea". In fact, the AI and neuroscience communities have made no real progress toward building a sentient machine or a respository for one, much less devising the means of transferring a human mind, or more importantly, a consciousness into such a device. And they're not working on it any more either. Nobody's willing to underwrite it any more, after 50 years of little or no progress toward strong AI.
If you doubt this, consider whether we have built intelligent devices that match the ability of "lower" organisms, and failing that, how we could then repositories for such. Even insect "minds" are phenomenally complicated and multidimensional, and we're basically lost when it comes to understanding much less building them.
As such, speculation on how or when this herculean technological feat will be accomplished is meaningless and should identify the source of such drivel as someone who just wants his name in lights, like Kevin Warwick's stunt to insert a RFID tag under his skin and then declare himself to be a cyborg. People like these do great harm to long term insanely hard enterprises like AI by trivializing, overpromising, and underdelivering. Can you say, "The boy who cried wolf"?
BT should be embarassed to have hired this goof. Shareholders should ask for their money back.
Pearson's web page:
http://www.btinternet.com/~ian.pearson/
Randy
My brain can't be downloaded due to DRM.
My employer says I can't let trade secrets be transferred to another media.
There is a company policy stating passwords can't be written down or kept in any electronic form.
I'm so screwed.
This is no different that cloning. Let's say you make a clone of yourself. Sure the clone will be identical as you, but if you die and it lives, you are still dead. I'd say the only way to avoid death is to find a way to implant your brain into another body.
This type of brain copying and downloading to other bodies is the basis for two books by Richard Morgan - Altered Carbon and Broken Angels. Great sci-fi with excellent action and plot twists.
Hundreds of years in the future all human beings have a data storage device (cortical stack or stack for short) embedded in the back of the neck from infancy. This device stores the contents of the brain, and if you can afford it, it can be backed up offsite.
Whenever a person "dies" the personality and memories can be copied from the stack to a new body. It may be a cheap synthetic or for the rich, clones of the original body. The destruction of a person's stack (aka "true death") is considered even more of a crime than murder is today.
Is currently backed up on my old C-64. (Shamelessly stolen from Fark)
Conciousness is so poorly understood that I don't think you can even say that for sure.
Yep. What if you made a copy of yourself, which one is the real you? What if the copy decides you're the one who's is not the real you and should be destroyed?
This whole business of uploading the mind onto a computer is so much unmitigated crackpottery. Star-Trek voodoo science, that's all. You can copy the brain but you can't copy consciousness. For one, you don't know what it is. Until you do, you're up shit creek. And when you find out what it is, you'll realize that it can be neither copied, nor created, nor destroyed.
Having said that, if someone found a way to copy the brain and move your unique consciousness into the copy, now that would be cool!
As a humanist I don't believe in any sort of a supernatural soul, so your premise is incorrect. I do firmly believe however that my conciousness is firmly attached to the physical hardware that is my brain.
If you would like to prove me wrong, you could perform a simple scientific experiment involving a large rock and your brain.
Deleted
It's called writing.
This has been in sci fi before. Most of the time the story gets it as NOT making a copy of one's brain, but a trasfer to another brain or a computer.
IE: the original is destroyed in the copy process.
In the former (copy) we are making a clone, in the later we are doing a transplant. But do you realize what this all means? The religious will say that you can't make a copy of the soul, so you can only transfer the soul from one body to another or to a computer? Boy will the bible thumpers be all over this one, it will make the protests of abortion look tame!
We can store a picture of the construction of our brains as a collection of 1's and 0's.
Who cares? I mean really. One idea that transcends most religions is that your conciousness leaves your body when you die.
Assume you could reupload your brain into an empty shell to bring you 'back to life'. Would that entity have a soul? If I were one who subscribed wholeheartedly to the notion of souls... I would say no.
So then why would a human clone have a soul..
oh no Ive gone crosseyed.
Amazon link
... Sorry that was so long, I could go on for hours about this. I highly recommend reading Kurzweil's book if you like thinking about this stuff... it's very thought provoking.
This is probably one of my favorite books. It covers his predictions for the next 100 years, and I gotta say, he hasn't been that far off so far.
Kurzweil argues, for one, that we will meet in the middle. Already we have technologies (though not in widespread use) to augment the brain and other organs. We've brought site to a few blind people this way. At the same time, we are understanding more about how the brain works, and computers are becoming fast enough to implement these brain processes in an electronic (non-organic) device.
As for this topic, I've done a lot of thinking about it. The big question of course, is the essense of conciousness. If a computer were built with the same mental processes and capabilities as a human mind, and a "snap shot" of a person's ("Joe" for example) memories and behaviors, etc were uploaded to the computer, and it were powered on and was insistant on being Joe, would it really be? Unfortunately, there is absolutely no way of knowing for sure. You have to decide if you want to take Joe2's word for it, or if it's just an elaborate immitation of Joe.
It is my personal belief that many of the things we consider intelligence CAN be implemented in a computer, because they are simply algorithms. Searching, pattern recognition, prediction based on observation, etc. These are all simply tools that our concious mind uses, much in the same way an arm is used to manipulate the physical world.
Even if we can mimmic those mental tools in a machine, I do not believe the actual "soul" or "conciousness" of a person can be transfered.
no comment
"I think the copy might disagree with you."
The copy might disagree as would be it's right since it is a seperate being. That does not negate the fact that the original (i.e. you, me, the grandparent) would still no longer exist, think etc.
Would I be happy that a copy exists after I die so my uniqueness isn't extinuished? I dunno, I'd be dead so I doubt I'd have any feeling on the matter.
And you thought philosophy was no fun. ;-)
Trusted Computing FAQ | Free Dawit Isaak!
I could understand when this is used to prolong the lives of people with extraordinary abilities (excluding ability to make money), but making a regular stupid CEO live forever is like wiping one's ass with a stack of hundred dollar bills. Not comfortable, insulting to the ones who are worse off, and utterly not necessary.
You have no facility in your own brain to initiate its upload to a computer.
Maybe you don't...my brain has an ftp client.
(Slightly) more seriously....how do you know that this future technology will not be initiated by a process in the brain rather than in the computer? It could require some special hypnotic or drug-induced "dump" which might then be captured by the machine.
In any case, I think we should use kermit for the transfer.
Given a choice between free speech and free beer, most people will take the beer.
and Steve Ballmer as Dr. Evil. There was a hilarious video shown at the Networld/Interop in 1999. I'll have to find a copy.
I thought it was always defined as a download is data heading towards the machine, upload is data going away so in the case of an FTP PUT, the machine with the original data is uploading and the machine which is being sent the data is downloading.
How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
If they make a copy of me, and I had songs memorized, wouldn't the RIAA come and delete me???? What if my "brain image" ended up on Kazaa??? wow...
-Guns kill people like spoons made Rosie O'Donnell fat-
He makes a BIG assumption that you are soley contained within your brain...
Life is still a mystery.. an consciousness is a realm that even science has a hard time approching because of it's subjectivity.
640K should be plenty of room for their brains. You can carry your memories around on a 5.25" floppy disk.
And I took my flying car to work this morning.
You're nothing; like me.
If this prediction is true, which I'm pretty certain it is not, well fine. But the smart money, in my opinion, focuses on the opportunity in hand. That means focusing on maximizing the pleasure, beauty, joy and and meaning in the short lifespan you expect to have.
When I've heard of somebody who's obsessed with one of these life-extension schemes that will make some distant future generation able to reboot them, the question that always raises itself in my head is, "why would future generations want to?"
It strikes me that this sort of thing is kind of an updated version of Pacal's Wager. They're betting that they're going pick the right technology, the right institution, the right financial and legal isntruments, and that, in the end, the society of the future will be interested in, or at least tolerate the reanimation of prior generations to share the planet and the accumulated progress of centuries. Many think that the theistic position in Pascal's wager is intellectually contemptible; at the very least it's questionable. But people who choose this path generally live with higher degrees of day to day satisfaction with their lives, repaired and renewed relationships to the people around them, and a sense of meaning and purpose which the more skeptical of us can only envy.
A wager on technological imortality is not in any sense intellectually contemptible, but I'm skeptical of what it means for the lifespan you are are living presently, and the compromises and sacrifices you would have to make if you were really committed to making it happen. Sure, if it were the health care proxy equivalent of checking of $1 to go to presidential campaign fund, I'd consider doing it if my family did too. But I'm not going to start dedicating my life to earning tons of dough so I can simply prolong it.
Let me suggest an alternative to a life spent grubbing money, swilling antioxidants, and obsessing over a will the complexity of which would make Bill Gates' lawyers blench. Think about the people you most admire. Suppose hypothetically your heros are Richard Feyman, Douglas Adams, Nelson Mandela and Dr Seuss. Strive to cram into your life as much as you can of whatever it is you think makes those guys wonderful. Do everything in your power to ensure that when you are on your death bed you have maximized the number of people who think its a damn rotten shame the world is going to lose somebdoy who as done so many important, wonderful things.
Let them order up and pay for the immortality treatment, if it's feasible by then and you're so damn special.
In short my prescription for the life well lived: Have the heart of a lion, the soul of a poet, the mind of a scientist, the benevolence of a saint, the playfulness of a child... and to hell with eternity. If the world forgets me, well, I expect it will be mutual.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
From Dangerous Visions
Pardon my ignorance, but what in the hell is a futurologist? Did he need to get a degree in it, or is he just a self-proclaimed expert? I think I'll deem myself a masturbatologist. Or perhaps a porn-downloadologist.
see the highly relevant dilbert cartoon
The Human Brain is so powerfull (far more powerfull than a computer) because it forgets. Imagine each time you write you'd remember all the pain it took to learn it. Imagine each time you scated, you'd remember all the bruises it took to learn it.
No fun.
On top of that comes the following: A huge part of what we memorize is stored into our nervous system and physical body. Me typing this just now for instance happens to a large part independently of my brain. Brain damaged people can still learn manual skills without forgetting them.
Braindumping onto a computer would reveal that what's stored in our head-organ is nothing much more than an huge mess of impressions and abstractions of those. Something like the entire internet without google or other structuring measures.
Our brain needs a physical body we identfy with and regular intervals of shutdown (sleep) in order to function properly. It needs a wide array of non-brain rythmic processes in order to even think properly.
Dumping them pure informational contents of a human brain onto a HD in order to store what we know would bring disappointing results.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Toaster: Would you like some toast?
...
...
Lister: Mm-mm.
Toaster: Some nice hot crisp brown buttered toast?
Lister: Mm-mm.
Toaster: You don't want any toast then?
Lister: No.
Toaster: What about a muffin?
Lister: Nothing.
Toaster: You know the last time you had toast? 18 days ago. 11:36,
Tuesday the 3rd. Two rounds.
Lister: Ssshhh!
Toaster: I mean, what's the point of buying a toaster with artificial intelligence if you don't like toast?
Lister: I do like toast!
Toaster: I mean, this is my job! This is cruel, just cruel.
Lister: Look, I'm busy.
Toaster: Oh, you're not busy eating toast, are you?
Lister: I don't want any!
Toaster: I mean, the whole purpose of my existence is to serve you with hot, buttered, scrummy toast. If you don't want any, then my existence is meaningless.
Lister: Good.
Toaster: I toast, therefore I am.
Lister: Will you shut up?
[He goes back to sniffing his way through the book. Rimmer enters.]
Lister: Rimmer, there's nothing out there, you know. There's nobody out there. No alien monsters, no Zargon warships, no beautiful blondes with beehive hairdos who say `Show me some more of this Earth thing called kissing'. There's just you, me, the cat, and a lot of floating smegging
rocks. That's it. Finito.
Rimmer: Lister, if there's no one out there, what's the point in existence? Why are we here?
Toaster: Beats me. Do you want some toast?
-------- This space intentionally left blank --------
I fit the entire contents of my boss' brain on a 128 MB USB drive I bought at Staples this morning.
"What we experience, if you want to call it that, is user illusion."
User illusion, subjective experience, is all we have. If that ceases, explain to me how copies would help me out, I'd no longer exist as my subjective viewpoint has ended.
Objectively those people would be as much 'me' as I were, each with their own subjective experience viewpoints, but that does not negate the fact that I would be dead.
If I can download my brain but not my penis what good is this?
--ken
Bitcoin pyramid: Join here: http://www.bitcoinpyramid.com/r/1427 it's FREE!
um, Robert J. Sawyer already has a whole novel on the topic, Mindscan. Did he have a chat with Pearson? because the way he portrays the process in the novel is almost completely the same; even the year (2047 in Mindscan).
If a 'copy' is a perfect copy, then it is no longer just a copy, it is a second instance of the original.
That, of course, is the trick:
1. Define 'Perfect copy'.
2. Make copy a 'perfect copy'.
3. profit?
There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
And label yourself "stephen_hawking.torrent".
As well as complex neural cross-talk that goes on, some scientists have speculated that there are quantum-mechanical processes that go on in the brain that can't be reproduced by a traditional computer. If this is true, then only a quantum computer has a hope of being able to emulate a human brain.
And if your brain is dying, why is it dying? And what makes you so sure that it wouldn't die in emulation if you emulate it correctly?
As technology has moved back to the organic in some areas, I think there's going to be a convergence of the biological and the technological. That being said, I think the better approach is not to move your consciousness into a computer that may be ill-suited to it, but rather to use technology to repair the cellular mechanisms you already have in place.
Thinking of the human brain as a "legacy system" that needs to be replaced seems counterproductive to me. Is it possible to develop computers smarter than us? Sure, but they'll be an entirely new sort of intelligent system, very different from us. Preserving humans and advancing AI seem productive to me, while trying to convert one to the other seems like an unnecessary challenge.
No reason not to try, though.
On the other hand, perhaps we just wait for all the filthy rich to go digital, then we pull the plug and divvy up all their stuff.
This notion of avoiding death by downloading your brain always makes me think of Woody Allen's line: "Some people want to achieve immortality through art or their children; I want to achieve immortality by not dying."
If you download your brain into a computer before you die, have you really transferred your consciousness into that computer? No, of course you haven't. When I duplicated my laptop's hard drive into my tower computer, did that make my tower into a laptop computer? Of course not.
So when you duplicate your brain into a computer, you don't survive; all you wind up with is a computer that *thinks* it's you. You are still dead. This method is only for those egomaniacs who think that the world couldn't possibly survive without their presence; and the number of people for whom that is true is exactly zero.
Not that there wouldn't be some interesting applications of the technology. But it is not by any stretch of the imagination immortality.
-- The reason it's called the right wing? Irony.
For an excellent sci fi book that really delves into the sociological implications of brain copying/storing then check out Altered Carbon
5 457684/qid=1116873581/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/002-652539 9-5940842?v=glance&s=books
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/034
Well, I am sure there are more than one, but...
It occurs to me that the greatest difficulty in this process would be making the copy able to function. To me it is all about interfacing what the brain knows how to do to communicate with how a computer communicates.
For this to even work, a person would have to wire their brain into said supercomputer and train their brain to use it simply by thinking - before they were downloaded. Otherwise, you have a perfectly good copy of a brain that can do nothing, as it is not connected to any of the 'interfaces' that it previously controlled (eyes, hands, ears, mouth (vocal chords), etc..).
Even more challenging would be writing software to avoid the necessity of training the brain and interpret the brains instructions into the proper computer instrutions.
A computer in 50 years may be as powerful as the human brain, but will it run the same OS?
There are alot of people who would like to be me. I just haven't met them yet.
You can download your brain all you want, it wont be YOU. Not unless its the brain itself inside the computer. The way I see it is, if its not my actual brain then im dead it doesnt matter if the contents of my brain have been backed up or not.
There is no evidence for a soul. You might as well be saying, "Your spleek will die along with your body".
....need only 640k for his?
you are already being uploaded. What you are experiencing is the replaying of your life as part of the synchronization process.
Depends on how much of 'you' is left in your organic mind at that point.
Personally, I'd use a fist-size lump of synthetic diamond and ruby (ruby lasers for optical processing in the diamond substrate) implanted between my kidneys and interfaced through my brain. As neurons fail, it'd take over for them, until they all fried; at that point there should be sufficient nanotechnology to construct a new body.
Neatly sidesteps all the happy fun continuity questions, I think.
He ripped off that Next Generation episode where that goofball doctor transferred his mind into Data. This is OLD NEWS!
"I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
Muahahaha!
Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
The word is reel.
Energy from nuclear fusion will be available at about the same time. That 's probably because "in 50 years" is code for "anything could happen in 50 years".
If Microsoft comes up with the process how many service packs will it take to fix the errors in the download?
Maybe some day this will come true:r -640.mov
http://www.maxmomirror.com/mirror/robot/Pete_Mise
I hope the visionary research continues, but I'll be skeptical until some visible progress in this field can be shown. Some proof that this can work in practice on some simpler life forms would be a better start than predictions by a futurist.
I think I understand people's desires to either "live on" or perhaps for their passed loved ones to "live on". But I hope we don't let the emotional desperation for immortality hide the possibility that what this tech promises could be entirely off its target.
We'd all agree that even generations into this technology, there will be flaws and limitations. A few errors isn't a big deal for some systems. But in a chaotic, highly-interconnected, complexly fedback system like the brain, it could be a big problem -- we know that a small change in the input, or system state at input, will commonly result in massive changes in output -- the output will be unpredictable and very likely not what the orignal system would have output.
For example, even if tiny little (seemly acceptable) errors result in differences as subtle as being in an altered chemical state or forgetful or extremely agitated, this could be effectively useless.
"Close" may not cut it for this to be really useful or really satisfying.
I thought this was supposed to be 'News for Nerds', not 'Speculation for Halfwits'...
This is NOT Speculation for Halfwits? And you tell me now??
The "soul" is a human concept brought about to overcome the fear of death. It was useful for those in power because they could then tell their subjects to go and sacrifice themselves on the behalf of their leaders. The soul going on to experience eternal bliss in valhalla or heaven or whichever afterlife you care to mention.
The soul doesn't exist, there is only conciousness. The only immortality would be, as you mention, to replace individual parts one at a time.
Deleted
equivalent to humans is not a good idea, no matter how far off into to future it may be. Humans need to solve all of society's problems first (inequalities, greed, arrogance, famine, disease, corruption, mental illness, etc... and the list goes on...) Why? Because if we don't, those traits will be ingrained into a computer that is connected to other computers via networks. Sounds like a good start for 'Terminator'-like robots, something akin to 'The Borg', or iRobot. Think about all the things that YOU think about during the day, then think about the things you actually discuss with people, the thoughts you share. What could a sentient computer think about, considering the advances in processing power that could be achieved in the future? We could be engineering our own destruction if we were to create a competitor with a mind that is better than ours. Let's be realistic here, the middle and lower portions of the bell curve won't be developing such a creation, and we know that in working and living in the upper portion of the bell curve that there are personal and political agendas. How would these attributes not be part of a sentient machine of our own creation?
You might as well ask if you still have a soul when you get magically transferred into the body of your father, and vice versa.
It's a fun little (but utterly pointless and unilluminating) mental game. Thought experiments are only "experiments" if they can be tied back to real phenomena. Otherwise it's just fantasizing.
It's a matter of perspective. I doubt you could clone yourself and be able to change your perspective to the clone.
Even if you could make a complete copy of your mind simply because you could interact with it, hence talk to yourself, means in all reality all you did was make a copy of yourself.
To everyone else it would be you but your still dead. It's all a matter of whose perspective you take.
don't tell me i'll be a member of the last generation to die.
... that avoiding death will be possible much earlier. Who wants to download (upload!!!) his brain to a computer??? Nonsense.
Looking at current nanotechnical and genetical science progress, we will soon be able to stop, maybe even reverse ageing processes. What we need to do are just two things: find out how ageing works and find a counter-measure (nanotechnical, genetically engineered robots?).
THAT sounds pretty realistic to me.
Yes but the digital switchboard will only hold you for a few days while the Mick Jagger tries to capture your new body.
"Lets do a little Gedanken expirement shall we?:"
"Let's say your conciousness IS reducible down to bits and bytes and you download it."
Might as well stop right there. It's only an experiment if it can be tied back to real phenomena. Otherwise it's about as illuminating as positing that dragons and unicorns exist, and then extrapolating what they might eat.
I initialy read that last line as-
"I guess we should all start saving our PENISES now.".
Wow, technology IS coming a long way.
"The Wright brothers were the first to fly with a heavier-than-air machine, but boy did they have a lousy plane"
Become one with the machine. Be the machine. But in this case, machine becomes you instead...
I think that only happens in Soviet Russia...
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
My biggest problem with talk about turning your conciousness into a digital format is that I am not a digital construct, I am an analog construct.
In theory, if you could take a perfect snapshot of the state of my brain, then it would be possible to create a simulator that would, in effect be me. However, this suffers from a major problem - How do you get a perfect snapshot?
While I am not sure how it works in Dr. Pearson's universe, in my universe we are limited by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle and the Planck Length. Now, IANAP (I am not a physicist), but it seems to me that no matter how good the snapshot of my brain is, some information is going to be innacurate or unmeasurable. Now, this may be incredibly small, (the Planck length is on the order of 10^-35 meters), but according to chaos theory, it will add up.
So, since we know the physical reality of the universe means some error must occur, then no matter what format we use, some data is lost, and I no longer exist. Yes, there might still be an incredibly close copy, but it is still a copy and not me. Personaly, I would rather hang around as long as possible in my analog construct as possible. If I decide I would like a digital near-copy, that would be great, but I'm not going to claim its me any more than I would claim a clone is actually the original person.
Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
it would be like, just having mouth to speak... OR talking with you alone for days! A SERIOUS MENTAL TORTURE. and even if you had senses... it would be far more devasting! struggle for existance, SELF-PRESERVATION, selfishness etc will be there and it will be just minutes before you activate a brain of geek... before he starts 'try' ruling the whole internet & every digital equpments........ With the power to learn new things in lightning speed; it could do anything.
Seems pretty optimistic as far as the timeline is concerned, considering that at the present time we have no clear idea of what data would have to be "downloaded" to provide an adequate description of the physiology and state of a particular brain. It could well require determination of the location of most synapses in the brain, along with the number of neurotransmitter receptors at each one, their phosphorylation state, and quite possibly other info. Even if we knew what to download and how to plug that data into a simulation, it could be extraordinarily difficult to get that data out in a nondestructive manner.
Who wants to go first? We'll just serially section your brain, characterize all of your synapses, and bring your consciousness back up in a computer simulation. It worked in the monkeys...
Presumably, the first volunteers will be incurably ill incurable optimists--the sort of people who these days have their brains frozen. Come to think of it, maybe those frozen brains would make good test subjects. Something to write into your will before you have your head frozen?
ah yes, I would like to GPL my brain, please.
Frederik Pohl used the idea before Gibson, in the Gateway trilogy. (Neuromancer is from 1984, Gateway is from 1976, Beyond the Blue Event Horizon is from 1980). BTW, "Gateway" got the Hugo, the Nebula, and the Locus Award.
Thomas
This brings up the question of whether data extracted from a brain would be any different than normal data.
Would there be some part of the data that was unidentifiable that would be one's conscience or would it just be a mass of memories and instinct?
The living body (including the brain) is not static over any period of time, so a perfect copy is impossible.
In addition the living brain/body system is not linear, which means that even slight differences in the initial states will likely lead to radically different results over time.
In addition, the act of observing (copying) the matter of the brain resolves and therefore alters its quantum state.
Maternal twins are the closest to copying a computer program because they start with identical sets of static source code. While many maternal twins share similarities, they are demonstrably not the same person.
So any chance that there'd be a torrent of Lary Page's brain? How about Bill? Sergey?
- Teja
Consider the following sentence...
"It is not possible to understand why a rose is beautiful through any materialistic philosophy."
There are a few things wrong with this line of reasoning. First, the thinking is absolute. As if one way of knowing is any more important than another. Second, a rose only exists for you to ponder its beauty because of material processes. Its DNA design has no inherent beauty code. Beauty is a judgement made by the viewer. Third, is the assumption that the experience of feeling beauty isn't something that could be given to a machine. The experience of beauty is very likely to be simple reaction. The "qualia" of an observed thing definitely depends on many factors inherent in the design of the brain. And the design of the brain has been evolved through millions of years of evolution. A fly probably doesn't have the same qualia from a flower as it does road kill.
Now, I have a real problem with anyone who tries to discount "materialism" as being outright wrong. Most of the people who do have a very hard time understanding the interconnectedness of physical and electrical systems. Many people who talk about the mind being some kind of spiritual energy have no idea of what they are talking about. Spiritual energy of what? What is that energy measured in, and what are the opposites which bring about this manifested energy? And how does this energy interact with physical systems? I say BS. Most of the people you've mentioned and the books you've stated are all from armchair philosophers who have very little knowledge of the world. Their understanding of the world is from a fairytale perspective that predicts nothing, and doesn't change our state of existance one iota.
We humans are animals. We have arms, legs, hair, ears, eyes, a nose, and a mouth. We belch, have sex, and eat. There is nothing that makes us any more special than a baboon except some skills with our vocal cords and hands. It is completely disingenuous to create some kind of fluffy comfy chair world where we can fly around in our heads and withdraw into a state of self denial.
Get real. Wake up and smell the coffee. Learn how to perform some integral calculus or Laplace transforms. Definitely learn some engineering and computer programming. Then and only then will I give my time for debate with overzealous flunkies like Casey and Silva.
Anyone who assumes a copy of oneself is as good as eternal life assumes a soul.
This is a simple logical test: say you manage to make a copy of yourself. Would you then have no fear shooting yourself in the head? Do you believe your consciousness would be transferred to the copy at the point of your death? That could only happen if there was some immaterial link between you and your copy. A soul, if you will.
How would you even go about downloading your brain to hardware, no matter how sophisticated? Consciousness is not something separable from the body. You can't just plug a wire in your brain and have your consciousness dance along that wire to a new host. The only way I can see you might even possibly do it is, as suggested, to replace the organics gradually with something else. Would you still be you after that? Who's to say...
All in all, if you create a copy of yourself and can't sense what the copy is feeling, that is, don't suddenly have some kind of telepathic link with that copy, I wouldn't trust it to be a path to immortality for individuals. Mankind as a whole, maybe, if you accept that machines can be children as much as babies.
Discussed in Frederik Pohl's Heechee storyline starting with Gateway.
Not an affiliate link.
Eggs (ova) are not replaced over time. They are created and then maintained until they are ovulated.
Namely, what happens to your physical brain?
If it dies, YOU'RE DEAD - regardless of what's running on the computer.
Every single downloader advocate I've heard ignores the fact that "you" have a unique space-time location. Duplicate that location and you're merely duplicated yourself. That is NOT "immortality" of any sort. It's merely REPLICATION.
The ONLY way to achieve immortality is to transmogrify the body and brain IN PLACE (with non-stop, fault-tolerant, failure-tolerant, restartable, and 'resurrectable' procedures).
Otherwise all you're doing is building a copy - YOU are still going to die.
Morons.
And this is what passes for "Transhumanism" among idiots like the Extropians.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
What companies are or will be working on this?
Where and how can I join the development team?
I'm sure they'll need to do some testing before releasing the process to the wealthy.
The developers always get first access to new technology.
..will I run linux? Can I run a beowulf cluster of me?
Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
I can't wait to read the EULA on this one!
Yes, but it wouldn't be you, and it's got nothing to do with souls. The claim of the article is that in the future "death will be effectively eliminated" because of the 'uploading' process. This is provably wrong, if you only invest a little thought.
Imagine that the process is not destructive, and that a perfect copy is created in the chair across the desk. In fact, let's imagine three copies were made. There are now four of you in the room, which one is you? Do you now observe the scene from four sets of eyes with some sort of super-consciousness?
Obviously not, you're still the one behind the desk. The copies in the chairs are constructions, separate individuals from you and each other. If you were to die in that moment you would not live on in these clones; you would be wherever we go after death (rebirth, afterlife, nowhere, whatever) and these clones would go on living their lives separate from you. Your friends and family may meet one of these clones and think that it is you, but that's not the same.
People like Dr. Pearson give futurists a bad name.
As for the other poster who claimed that consciousness is so poorly understood that we can't know, that's bull crap. We know plenty about consciousness. We don't know everthing, but we have enough facts to know that consciousness is intricatly tied to, and is an emergent property of the physical processes of the brain. A copy of you--whether the clones mentioned here or in the memory banks of some future computer--would no longer be linked to your personal, subjectively experienced consciousness.
And wouldn't you have to do that at the quantum level?
And didn't ol' Heisenberg say something about not being able to do that?
I think the author has demonstrated that it really is possible to watch too much Star Trek.
-S
P.S. I guess it might be possible to "record" the perceptions of an individual by intercepting nerve impulses on their way to the brain, but that doesn't get you much in the way of imortality.
Who owns the hardware? For example, as a parallel just look at those cryogenic storage places. First, who actually believes they'll still be in operation by the time a cure is found for whatever killed the corpsicle. I for one don't think it's viable.
So pray that the OS isn't something made by Microsoft. I can just see what happens when an Exception 0E occurs. Or little Johnny deletes Grandpa and then you have to restore him from 4mm tape.
A co-worker and I were just discussing this. Just think of the implications with regard to religion. Where exactly will the soul reside?
And of course we had a good laugh over the whole thing.
You are actually not the same person you were when you were younger. It's pretty well demonstrated by events like a high school reunion.
(While presented humorously, I'm serious about the point. By any measurable--or physically copyable--attribute, you are definitely not the same person you were even 5 minutes ago. Sure, metaphysically you are still "ajs" but that's not exactly copyable.)
The question is simply where you'll spend it.
Just use a really slow (like 2x) CD-RW drive if you plan to download your consciousness and everything will be fine.
..... that should take George W Bush all of 2 seconds on a 28K modem.
It is a convention based on "up" being "to the (conceptually) bigger system".
Upload means to transmit from you to elsewhere.
Download means to receive from elsewhere to you.
Upload is to put.
Download is to get.
There is no "convention" here; the meanings are quite clear.
Futurologist? Unless he did his Ph.D. on alcoholism and suicide in single robot homes, I've got no respect for his opinion.
The interesting question, to me, has always been what will happen when we can extend life semi-indefinetly. How does society determine who gets to live? If he is correct that money will be the determinant, how long can that society last? I don't see roughly 6 billion people docily going to their death when real alternatives exist.
I have nothing to hide. So, why are you spying on me?
Exactly. The computer will be downloading your mind from you, your brain will be uploading your mind to the computer. Receiver and sender. How could SLASHDOT readers get confused about this? =)
I wager 5 quatloos on the new comer.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
BUT! .. if you get caught cheating or forget an anniversary, you can always restore her from last week's backup.
"as a disembodied head living in a jar, I envy the dead."
-George Foreman's Head
I like to think that our brain is an interface to our soul, we use it to control our bodies and to receive input from our senses. We can even guess that our memories are some sort of a cache, for quick access.
This way, to be immortal, one would have to create a computer mechanism capable of interfacing with our soul, and them a way to transfer the control from a organic brain to this artificial interface!
More, with some tweaking one should be able to grow a entirely new body from steam cells, or something like it, and "tune" it to your soul... then, you just to "disconnect" your old body and enjoy the brand new one!
---- You know how some doctors have the Messiah complex - they need to save the world? You've got the "Rubik's" complex
This reminds me of an old strategy PC game called Total Annihilation.
The plot is that in the far future not only is the transfer of consciousness from flesh to machine possible, but the reigning government makes it mandatory for the safety of all its citizens.
Of course, not everyone liked the idea of tossing their bodies aside, so civil war erupted.
Personally, this development gives me a chill.
#define QUESTION ((bb) || !(bb))
Sorry, you only get one license and it isn't transferable.
Besides, how many quacks have been saying this sort of thing over the past 50 years???
I thinks Mother Natures copy protection is quite effective. Although I have no doubt we will be able to genetically modify the human race to extend lifespan significantly (i.e. the wealthy and the powerful that is...), I doubt forever.
Thinking we can build a machine to do it I think speaks volumes of our ignorance about how the brain really works and if it truly is the part that provides "conscious" thought.
Note, I am not sure if we REALLY understand the difference from conscious thought and intelligence.
Do the two require each other for example?
Exactly what IS UN conscious thought if so?
We have lots of crack pot organizations right now that measure intelligence for example, like MENSA.
I am not even sure we know what intelligence is let alone how to measure it.
I have a PhD sitting next too me who I think is clueless half the time and I do not find him intelligent. Meanwhile, the guy who use to do Tattoo's for people has written genuinely interesting and useful software for our customers and is self taught. His work pays for the over inflated EGO and salary of the PhD guy.
???
So what is intelligence?
I think it is any organisms ability to modify its environment to an extreme (i.e. make its own environment to sustain itself even when the outside environment would kill it.)
So if you build a house in response to winter, or air conditioning units in response to heat I would consider that intelligent.
(if you move into outer space and do it, your not just intelligent, your going to likely live forever...)
However, I do not think you need to be conscious to do these thinks and explore the Universe, simply intelligent.
Sort of like the creatures in the new War of the Worlds remake.
-Hack
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
Baloneyologist Iam Person says it's BS. For purposes of prognostication futurologist carries with it no more credibility than fashion designer .
A "futurologist" is somebody who writes the same stuff as bad sci-fi writers do, only he calls it a "prediction" and gets mentioned on slashdot ...
The science of man/machine neural interfaces is still fledgling, at best. Recent advances have scientists inserting bundles of probes by the thousands and talking the brain into grafting nerves on to them for the purposes of recieving and recording signalling from the brain. The brain adapts to this and sees it as just another set of nerves to send impulses to, be it to move a cursor on a screen, or move a robotic arm.
However, these are purely motor functions. Over time, it will be possible for a human input text, or even simulated audio, ala speech, directly from the brain, once we have the knowledge and technology and *neural training* to use that kind of facility, as opposed to simple human speech.
Again, this is simply an output function. Neurology shows us that the brain functions almost identically when remembering something as it did when you experienced it, so the loose theory there is that it's possible to playback memory and possibly record it. But contextually, that's as useful as having home movies and considering them to be a recording of your life. This raises two problems: Being able to record and synthesize a memory into a useful data structure, and being able to query the brain to perform a sequential dump of the sum of your memories.
Problem one: Parsing a memory. This will be possible once we reach two distinct points in technology: Being able to 'record' a memory (or even a dream), and having sufficient AI capability to examine a scene and identify its contents in full, while understanding what the event is, and correctly correlating the emotional context along with relevence.
Problem two: The ability of the brain to accept and parse input from a machine. This means adapting the brain to accept a seventh form of sensory input (Yes, I said seven. I maintain that everyone has a sixth sense. Argue with me later, this is 'me' time.) Gibson has gifted us with an amazing prediction of the world to come, with all the reality that could possibly be attached to it.
Recent advances in science have given us the first and most basic of these interfaces, by grafting photoreceptors to the optic nerve to create and generate impulses that the optic nerve, and by extension, the brain, are capable of relearning as a replacement form of input. I postulate that it's not a large step from that point to replacing the photoreceptor layer with a much finer set of inputs that provide a feed from machine video output, because after all, that's just a set of voltage based signals as well.
Gibson's vision of cyberspace fits pretty well into this notion, and enables it as a possibility.
So, will it be possible to record a personality construct? I think it will be. Will people be able to subject themselves to reliving their entire lives to that point in order to make a backup of themselves? Possibly, but I'm not sure I want to be one of them, because I don't have enough faith in my fellow man to be sure that I'll get to keep all of the memories I want in the event that I have to be restored from backup, if restored at all.
The large shiny theory of immortality has a flip side, and it's based entirely upon human nature. Imagine that you're a strident Republican who's against this kind of technology, but you get talked into the process by your loving family. What kind of risk are you taking with this process, that when all is said and done, the backup you make isn't tampered with or subtly altered, in coincidence with an untimely accident, for policital reasons?
Once you're dead, you're dead. You're out of the game until someone puts you back into play. Like the venerable Dix, would you know you were changed? Also, cloning and the like permitting, are you being restored to an organic brain that may not be capable of taking a perfect restoration, or are you getting a shiny positronic core? Are you still considered to BE the person you WERE, or does the existential question of who you ARE come to the fore?
Think it won't happen? I predict now that it will, sho
- billn
We're all copies. Of the hundred trillion cells in our body a large proportion are replaced, or have a large proportion of their atoms replaced, over time. Even if this weren't the case, I can't see what harm would be done by replacing all of the atoms in someone's body with identical ones. Because of this I find it hard to put value on the specific atoms that make up my body but instead I value their functionality. If that functionality can be (destructively) reproduced by a machine I'm happy to walk into that machine. If other people aren't, then they can choose not to use it. But someome claiming to be me will thumb my nose at them from its shiny new robot body at their funerals.
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
"Not everyone agrees, but it's my conclusion that it is possible to make a conscious computer with superhuman levels of intelligence before 2020"
Even though he's a mathematician, I question the equation he used to come up with 2020. At the rate we've developed in the last 5 years, by 2020 we'd be lucky if automatic vacuums could dust first.
How can I possibly download my brain when I have no ethernet ports?
Beware the BSAA (Brains Scanners Association of America) whose member companies look for unique personalities, get them to sign a contract for $$$ that allows them to live out their lives, but the BSAA member company owns the copyright to the brainscan and DNA which allows them to make nearly unlimited copies of the individual at will and charge a boatload of money for the copies, all the while denying the original donor their fare share but claiming to protect the donor's "rights".
Most of those options remind me of the anecdote regarding George Washington's axe: Handle's been replaced thrice, the blade a couple of times, but it's still George's axe!
I've already created that theory on my blog, so, who cares if he believes he "believes" he "originated" the theory.
http://epatterson.tblog.com/
I think you meant to post that in this article.
"I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
Because two heads is bett3r than one.
For the purposes of this discussion, let's disregard the possibility that there are "weird" quantum space-time effects going on that make us "sentient" or "intelligent" or "alive" (in the thinking/reasoning sense). We don't know enough, what little we do know is fantastic enough as it is, and we have a ways to go. For now, let us suppose that the model we currently have of us, that the human brain is a collection of neurons interconnected via synapses in a somewhat "random" (ok, this part likely isn't true - since we are a robust network like the internet, social networks, etc - see Albert Laszlo Barabasi's "Linked" for more detail) network of connections that were formed based on patterns formed from our sensory systems (see Jeff Hawkins' book "On Intelligence" for more detail) - is true, and go with that.
So, based on that - in theory - if we can recreate those patterns and connections, we can recreate what is "you", right?
Suppose we had a way to do this - some form of nanotechnology in which we could put into your bloodstream devices (nanoprobes on nanobots, say), that could flow to your brain, and everywhere a neuron was, these devices could "hook into", and figure out that "when I get this signal, I should fire", or "when these frequencies of signals occur, I should fire" - and which synapses, etc - the signal is to go to, etc. After a while, these machines learn to simulate precisely what the real neuron is doing, right? For intents and purposes, you could kill the real neuron - one at a time, or all at once - and the "nanobot" doing the simulation would be performing the same actions, correct?
It wouldn't matter if this happened slowly or quickly - as long as the simulation of the structure matched that of the original structure beforehand. These nanobots would also have to "learn" how memories are formed, etc - how such a structure changes, etc over time - but it is a given that if such machines existed and worked, that they could do this, most likely.
So, at some point, you would have a head full of nanobots, and nothing else - are you still you? Logic would dictate that yes, you are still you, that the substrate really doesn't matter. So - go the next step: Start simulating the nanobots in software on a hardware platform. Provided the platform was big enough, fast enough, and robust enough, and could emulate/simulate the entire nanobot and networked structure perfectly, you could "kill" or shut off the nanobots (one by one or all at once!), and the simulation is still "you"!
This isn't an original idea - it was first proposed (I believe) by Hans Morevec, one of the original explorers of the field of AI in the 1950's and 1960's. It is an interesting thought experiment, as in this theory, the "you" of you isn't really dependent on the "where", but on the structure of the network. As we learn more about the brain, new knowledge seems to confirm this. Still, there is plenty of room for something else to topple these ideas - but much of it to me seems to border on "intelligent design" theory (hah!), or plain ole' deception via complexity (via invocation of scary and strange concepts like QM). Of course, things can easily get even stranger - couple the writings of Barabasi, Hawkins, Moravec with the ideas presented in Wolfram's "A New Kind of Science", perhaps along with some stuff from Kurzweil (Age of Spiritual Machines, among others), which seems more likely:
That we a strange "being" with a "soul" floating around waiting to be "called up" back to a mystical floating realm "out there"?
or,
That our brains, the "stuff" that makes us, is simply a very good pattern recognition, storage and playback machine, composed of a huge network of interconnecting nodes which we call "neurons"
Reason is the Path to God - Anon
So who would they sue when people start downloading movies off of KFM's_HaXx0r3d_br41n-v1.0?
And what would be the filesize of this 'brain'?
If all else fails... RTFM
However, I've read that in certain types of brain surgery, all electrical activity in the brain must be stopped for some period of time, and then "restarted". The person thus loses all the short term memory, but keeps the long-term, because that isn't dependent on continuous electrical activity. When that person wakes up, is he still considered the same old person, or just a "replica"?
Your opinion may be different, but I don't find that argument to be all that convincing. If I jump from the 100th floor of a skyscraper, then I (probably) won't die from crashing onto the sidewalk for a (short) while at least, but to extrapolate from that that the same thing will not happen in the future either would be ridiculous.
Now, I'm not saying that I necessarily have the opinion that those services you refer to won't be available to you within your lifetime, but I do specifically disagree with the statement that the argument itself is reasonably convincing. The reason why this kind of extrapolation sometimes does make sense is that even though the future is not crystal clear, you still are able to say that it's reasonable to assume that the current trends *will* continue in one form or another.
Here, though, that's not the case really - Moore's law still seems to work, but it very well may be that just like the sidewalk that will inevitably cause the death of the suicide jumper, there are laws of physics (unknown to us as of yet or not) that *will* put a sudden stop to Moore's law, too. (Again, note that the emphasis is on "it MAY be", even though for a layperson like me, it seems like there definitely *will* be a stop when the Planck scale is hit, at least.)
quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
I don't believe in reincarnation, including such aided by human intervention and machines.
Ifd I *did* believe in it, I really, really wouldn't want to come back as "Mr. Computer Head". That would be even worse than Mr. Potato Head.
The Bible says you get one life on this planet. I believe that. So I recommend making the most of it, rather tan counting on Mr. Machine to save you. Or Mr. Mad Scientist. Either way...
Will i get sued over downloading my brain. And can i make a torrent for it too.
If Practice Makes Perfect, And No One is Perfect, Why Practice?
There will be two great wars in the future, which will make all previous seem inconsequential.
One will be humans agains machines.
The other will be when human immortailty is discovered, and a small number of humans try to keep it from the rest.
And who in science will stand up and say that there is nothing more to a person than a finite state machine?
As much as many of you people may scoff at the metaphysical and spiritual arguments, they are still valid arguments, and they still may be true.
See, that's not entirely accurate. As Raymond Kurzweil has pointed out, technology advances at a very predictable rate. His paper "The Law of Accelerating Returns" does a good job documenting evidence of this fact spanning the entire last -century-.
The consistent exponential trend observed, when extrapolated, is what the claims of these futurologists stem from. They're not picking a wild fantasy and claiming they know when it will come to pass. They're making reasonable predictions based on consistent observed trends.
Also addressed in this paper, coincidentally, is the idea of uploading human consciousness, along with other common themes of futurism.
Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
What a complete load of codswallop. You obviously have no clue as to what death is. Change does not equal death. Death is the body failing, not the body changing. You do not die every picosecond as your body undergoes the complex chemical reactions needed to *gasp* maintain life.
Consciousness is more complex than just a chain of memories. It is so complex that we are barely beginning to understand it at all.
Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
So, if I share a Honda with my brother, and then the wheels fall off. My brother replaces them with ones that he owns. Then the gearbox breaks, and my brother replaces that with parts he owns as well. Eventually, the entire engine and body of the car have been replaced by my brother with parts that he owns. So, we still have joint ownership of the car, or is it really my brother's car?
Perhaps an even more straightforward example is with a computer. If I share a computer with my brother, but eventually my brother has replaced all of the parts of the computer with pieces he has bought including the case & PSU, then is it really still a jointy-owned machine? Or are the parts from the original machine that were discarded the jointly owned bits?
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. --Will
Another one: Kiln People, by David Brin.
They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
Note that it is not strictly speaking necessary for the uploaded environment to run at real-time speed. The main simulation requirement is storage and processing capacity, not timing. Of course, if the simulation is substantially slower than real time, it won't be nearly as appealing (though arguably still better than death).
Our brains themselves provide an existence proof that it is possible for a machine to contain human-level intelligence and consciousness, since the brain is just a very complex biological machine. The current method of replicating brains is very easy but doesn't preserve state; the trick will be determining how to replicate them (possibly with a different underlying technology) such that the state can be transferred.
It would be better to support longevity research and not have to die first. Projects like the methuselah mouse prize site (similar to the x-prize site that promoted research into getting into space cheaply, with the comming biotech breakthroughs, if you can live another 20 to 25 years, you could use the comming technologies to stop/slow/reverse aging.) at http//:www.mprize.org
They allready have the prize up to 1.2 million, if lots of people (and, who knows, it would help if a few IT billionairs (and rich oil barron types) who dont want to get old for 5000 years would contribute too!!). With the advances in stem cell research and the fact that Korea made those stem cell breakthroughs last week (in america, bush and the right wing are keeping US research in the dark ages). Another good site is www.betterhumans.com (for longevity news etc), with the comming age of advanced biotech and nanotech, even if the governments don't want you to develop technologies ro reverse aging and keep your body perpetually 20 to 25 years "old" so you don't get old, you could eventually do this yourself using advanced AI and nanotech without governments and big drug companies running the show. (in say, 75 years)
Yes, and that's why they are so excellent for performing simulations of other machines (even if we don't understand, which is usually the case, or we wouldn't have bothered with the simulation).
The one thing that a computer has never done and I don't think ever will is to understand the significant of the stream of 1s and 0s that it is manipulating. That would require true consciousness and TRUE consciousness is part of our minds.
Exactly. So instead of building a smart computer program, we build a simple computer program: a brain/nerve tissue simulator/interpreter. This requires very little understanding of how consciousness actually works. It does however require a very good computer, and a lot of medical research to understand how neurons really work.
There are things we don't understand yet (otherwise we could make autopilots from simulating the brains of flies), but it is not unheard of, to take a guess and say that those problems will be solved too, in 50 years.
No mater how good we get at simulating consciousness I don't believe that we will ever be able to take machine consciousness beyond the simulation into reality.
But when we are running a simulation of the brain in the software, it's much easier to experiment on it.
First of all, the "speed" of the brain could be hundreds or thousands times faster than a "normal" brain, all you need is a faster computer. This would (a) allow you to think faster, and (b) allow you to do "genetic" or "hormonic" experiments in software at a much higher rate, which could evolve "super-thinkers" pretty fast.
Secondly, you could have several of these "faster clones" communicate with themselves all at enormous speed, building entire research communities of "fast thinkers".
Lastly, in the real world, there are not too many really bright thinkers. In the virtual world, if you needed 15 copies of Stephen Hawking, you could have them at an instant.
And of course, all of these faster better thinkers can also think up better computer hardware to run the simulations of themselves even faster on.
Basically, this means that if we can make good enough hardware, and we can figure out how neurons work good enough to simulate them, it's only a matter of time before you have something radically smarter than you. Actually, it's only a matter of time before you have something radically smarter than all of the worlds scientists together. And that is the singularity...
It is plausible that these bright thinkers would eventually be smart enough to find out how consciousness works. But even if they don't, it doesn't really matter, because something pretty darn significant would have happened either way.
By any physically measurable (or copyable) attribute, you are a different person every morning. Metaphysically you are still "Eric Smith," but you can't absolutely establish that by any physical measure. You certainly can't copy it.
What is life? What is consciousness? What is time? It's ludicrous to think we'll somehow answer some of the oldest questions of humanity within the next 50 years just because our chipsets keep getting faster.
Your body changes physically in many ways on a constant basis. Yet, you remain you. That's a tougher nut to crack than just building a bigger memory bank or a faster computer.
Thank you for posting that comment. Now, if we could just get more people to realize the simple truth of your statement.
"I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
Fred Pohl invented the idea of downloading your brain into a computer upon death in his Heechee Saga. I read it about 15 years ago, and I think the book where he started it may be more like 20 or 30 years old.
Wait till people Ghost Hack other peoples brain's.
Someone's been watching too much Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
--Mythos
Read it too fast. Start shaving our WHATS?
Sixth Day, anyone?
"Death" would be just postponed until you give up.
I mean, I'm human. I'd lose 99% of what I used to call life, why put my brain in a jar if I cannot touch, smell or simply feel anything whatsoever?
If there is something past life, I'd like to try that out instead of becoming a "machine".
If we "had" to do it (by being "backed-up" by the government), I'd rm -f me.
Just my $.2 brazilian cents.
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You'd certainly know how to please both of "you"!
If you're telekinetic raise my hand.
No, there is no one-to-one parity between uploading and downloading. A transfer in one direction does not imply the opposite transfer from the opposite point of view. You cannot substitute upload and download with transmit and receive. The verbs upload and download contain information about the initiator; transmit and receive ignores the initiator.
To claim otherwise is to claim responsibility for your computer's actions when it is operated by an outside force.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
This is your brain...
This is your brain on BitTorrent...
Any questions?
-What have you contributed lately?
It must be nice to sit around all day and try to make up what you think might happen after you're dead. I mean, if you're wrong, who cares?
Honestly, I don't put much stock in 'futurology'. I think it's less than 10% science and greater than 90% made-up-on-the-spot bullshit with sketchy backup for 'facts', and way too much buzzword-of-the-day terminology.
IMHO, this isn't even newsworthy.
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
When do they cease to be human?
Is it when the last brain cell is replaced?
Is it when the first one gets replaced?
Is it somewhere in the middle?
I'd say it's after about 3000 years of debate or so.
Well, I'd say that *that* is a question that's the subject of an ongoing debate, at the very least. ^_~ But even if you actually could "download" all the information contained in the brain... what would you do with it? Data is essentially worthless if you have no way of interpreting it, but even if you do, things aren't always as easy as they might seem at first glance.
It's like with DNA - the fact that you do have the complete DNA sequence of, say, a sheep does not mean that you can build an actual sheep which does have this exact DNA. You need quite a bit of equipment for that, and I think the most important component is usually overlooked: you actually need another sheep, which leads to a kind of chicken-and-egg problem really.
In other words, even if you were able to save all the electric impulses, the proteins, and the way the cells are wired, it still would be a wholly non-trivial task to build an actual brain to match those specifications - or, for that matter, an artificial equivalent.
And what's more, that still wouldn't be enough. A brain is not a self-contained organ; it adjusts to the rest of the body. The signals delivered by one person's eyes might be quite different from those delivered by another person's - there simply is no standard interface, like there usually is in the computer world.
And then, even if you also overcome those obstacles, it's *still* not clear whether you'd actually get a human - as I said above, that is an open question that's been debated for a long time without any progress.
We'll just have to wait and see. :)
quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
Seriously. One of his ideas for what people could do in the "afterlife" is answer phones?
Instead of phoning up a call center and getting a machine that says, "Type 1 for this and 2 for that and 3 for the other," if you had machine personalities you could have any number of call staff, so you can be dealt with without ever waiting in a queue at a call center again.'
If that's the case, kill me now and burn the remains. I do that for a living now and it's driving me insane, if I was a disembodied mind trying to deal with disgruntled Comcast customers... I would go absolutely bug fuck. I would make Ghost in the Shell look like a day at the park.
||:|::
(Slightly) more seriously....how do you know that this future technology will not be initiated by a process in the brain rather than in the computer? It could require some special hypnotic or drug-induced "dump" which might then be captured by the machine.
You're still going to be interfaced to the machine, and if only for safety reasons, your mind will instruct the remote machine to pull your consciousness to it, similar to telnetting to another machine, opening an FTP connection to your laptop, and pulling your files to the remote machine (download).
What's more interesting is if you will even have a sense of transfer of consciousness or will it be a device upon which you become increasingly dependent until you no longer become dependent on your original system, with a continuity of consciousness throughout.
Because one thing you can't upload or download is code execution. Code is transferred in stasis from one system to other, but a running worm could exist as one entity on two systems until they break their connection.
Is a dividing cell uploading or downloading, or just replicating with continuity? And do we really have only one thread of consciousness or multiple threads which can separate and continue independently? Surgical evidence says the latter.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
The mind is not a turing machine. Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem shows us that there are some mathematical proofs that people can understand, but no Turing machine (read: any computer) will be able to compute. Therefore, human minds are qualitatively different than a turing machine. Minds are something other than computers. They are two diferent things.
So regardless of downloading your mind onto some computer, you won't really be cheating death, because that machine is not a feature-complete mind (or you will have some kind of severe mental imparement).
Currently, we don't even have a theoretical model of what the mind is.
Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
-- Pablo Picasso
False. The terminology originated in the early-to-mid 1960s with mainframes with remote stations. The remote stations were the smaller computers, and "uploaded to" or "downloaded from" the mainframe, regardless of which side initiated the transfer.
And what if it were between two mainframes of equal stature? How do you describe the transfer then? If you can still use the verbs upload and download, then the stature of the machines was never relevant to the definitions and their correlation was just a coincidence.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
But persons may be four dimensional rather than three dimensional.
Not worth living in my opinion.
http://www.rayn.net . Funny. Stuff.
Every now and then individuals get a clue: the Buddha, various monks in following in his footsteps, Jesus, etc.
On what basis do you make this declaration? On your own opinion of what is correct? On what "feels" right to you? Certainly not on any scientific basis, because there isn't one shred of scientific evidence that Buddha, Jesus or any of your 20th century metaphysical writers / philosophers understand the mechanics of human consciousness.
At this point there is no reason to believe that our consciousness is anything more than our physical bodies, because that is the simplest explanation (Occam's razor and all that).
Due to your ego and DESIRE for there to be something more to your consciousness than your physical body (and perhaps a desire to re-unite with lost loved ones), it is certainly easy to understand why you are so quick to believe that there must be "something more" that will "live on for eternity", but that doesn't make it true.
Anyway, from a scientific perspective, consciousness is only "not completely understood" only in the sense that we can not yet duplicate it experimentally. This isn't to say that there isn't a broad and growing knowledge base of scientific information about consciousness -- none of which implies that there is "something more" than our physical bodies involved.
Now where have I seen this, before? Maybe I should've submitted a paper after seeing the film and now people would be talking about what a visionary *I* am, instead of this joker.
I'll just stand in the corner quietly then.
This was *all* done in the 1980s. Reference Heechee
Reendezvous, ISBN: 0345300556, 1985. Robin dies, he is
downloaded and learns to interface with 'the real world' via
hologram. He even manages to survive for another book.
The question is:
Would identical brains share identical conciousness. I mean if one could copy your brain and brainwaves (soul) exactly identical then would you also share conciouness with that being?
There isn't a way to tell now because the changes of 100% exact replicas of souls/brains aren't scientifically possible and the random chance for them to happen in nature is nihl (identical twins come close but just not close enough).
However at the same time what you could combined brains? Would two brains become one?
If you merged your brain with an entity and then your brain died would you still be aware? Would you soul live on? It's all theoretical.
Think Borg.
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
Suppose you were created this morning with a head full of false memories. Would you be able to tell? How do you know you are the same person who fell asleep in your bed last night?
Would waking up from sleeping all night and waking up from having just been created 'feel' any different? If not, then from the standpoint of YOU at the moment you wake up would it in fact *be* any different?
Your point is right. This is not immortality, it's replication. You don't wake up in the computer, someone who remembers being you does. But that's not necessarily differently from waking up every morning. Is it?
Here's a quick 3 question quiz that'll show you if really would die (assuming that your personal belief system is correct):c gi?round=1
c gi?round=5&path1=a1&path2=b1&path3=c1
http://www.philosophers.co.uk/cgi-local/identity.
I got the following results when I did the test:
http://www.philosophers.co.uk/cgi-local/identity.
So copy or not is a mute issue. I'm still alive.
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Would google be able to index my memory? As well as being able to search for things, I'd be curious of the PageRank of various memories.
Has anyone trademarked MemoryRank yet?
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There are a lot of assumptions with this idea. One is that the mind/brain can be perfectly encoded or simulated using bits. This is a broad assumption.
Consider this: a computer program and its data being a string of bits is in the end the representation of a single, very large integer.
Is the mind an integer?
Would it be a stretch to imagine that there are physical parts of the brain that are physical embodiements of real numbers like PI that cannot be represented by an integer?
'Never try to download everything you know. It may take only a single floppy...'
The lesser/greater system originated from people who didn't understand upload/download and were trying to explain -- poorly -- to laymen.
How hard is it to understand? Do people have a hard time with the terms "give" versus "receive" as well?
Hey dude, I just received a present to you!
I'm a copy of my brother. As an identical twin, the cloning-debate seems strange to me. Much fuzz about nothing. Cloning, so what? Having an identical person is not bad for either person. Insted, you can do cool partytricks!
If I'm downloaded, I'll pay extra for my virtual copy to be loaded into a world with 1.000.000 female virgins and no men. Yeah, and free boose.
If you copied yourself atom-for-atom, would you be able to control and think for the copy, as well as yourself? Would you be able to see through two sets of eyes and think with two brains?
....
If not, then consciousness isn't a product of physics, because You can only be You, and a copy is now Someone Else.
I'm not arguing neccessarily for the soul, just the Self.
But isn't that all the soul really is? That I am Myself?
I guess the problem is that none of us knows an objective reality except through the "treaty of reality" we as a species have (mostly) agreed to, known as science
random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
You might wanna have a look at this :
:
"Hall of Tortured Souls"
http://crashrecovery.org/torture/
Robert
Sure, its just like you, and might even be 'self aware', but its not you, its a copy...
You still die...
---- Booth was a patriot ----
That was much less commonly done in the mid 1960s, and it was usually not referred to as either an upload or a download.
What I find disturbing is when people assume that a brain is equal to a computer. They compare and contrast the brain's capabilities with those of a computer, even going so far as to say "the playstation 1 is 1% as powerful as the human brain". That anology is ridiculous. Apples to oranges!! The brain cannot be compared to a computer, it is a vastly different entity. Going a step further and saying that you can represent a brain on a computer is even more ridiculous. A brain is not simply a thing that stores information. We think of it that way because it's a convinenet anology for something we dont understand...yet seem to be able to blab about it so well on ./
I charge that the brain is not the sum of and cannot be represented by a bunch of 1's and 0's. Nor can thoughts or the algorithms to produce them be represented with a Turing machine, no matter how powerful they become. A brain is not simply a container for information with algorithms to work from that information. A Brain's functions involve ideas, thoughts, emotions, judgements, instincts, and perceptions. Now try to represent that with a data structure.
...this bash.org quote will no longer be funny.
Bored? Browse Slashdot with a +6 modifier for Troll comme
> Of course, if you can identify the change that
0 &cid=12618267
> lost the soul, it follows you've identified the
> temple of the soul.
Not necessarly. As I said in:
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=15045
Think of the analogy of the race car driver. The body is the car and the driver is the soul. The driver may control the car (to some extent), but the driver is not the car.
You may be able to gradually replace all the parts of the car without harming the driver (even if the car is in the vacuum of space). But housing a soul completely in silicon doesn't necessarily mean that making a download copy is possible -- there's only one driver. The best you can hope for is soul transfer -- i.e. a way of safely tricking the driver to switch from one car (the biological car) into another (the silicon car).
Sure, you can copy the ROM, but how long until we get a decent human being emulator? I mean, fairly quickly there'll be one that can run small demos, but in emu-dev years, we won't have a good stable one for centuries.
Ok the current estimate of the human mind is 10 to the 8034th power. Computers are not reaching that any time soon.
The good news: enterprising people will figure out a way to make this process accessible to the ordinary person. The bad news: You'll spend the rest of eternity sending spam.
Most brains are quite obsolate by the end of their life time.
99% of the humans are better off simply dying.
The ones who might worth to be saved, were historically quite poor.
Look at the list of the richest people today.
Do they really worth to live even for an extra century?
I can't think of any...
But don't be shy, tell me which of the wealthiest 100 person deserves 100 years extension of life and why?
I am so curious...
Leave it to scientists to assume that you are the sum of your parts. Who can say for sure if consciousness will be translated over and intact along with the data? What if the human brain relies on it's active structure to make us aware that we are who we are? If there is no consciousness stored, what good are the memories? We will never be able to reconstruct a brain that matches the data stored. This would be a wasteful and futile effort if undertaken.
It takes just a moment and an action to destroy. It takes some time and thought to create.
excellent. before they reinstall the brain dump they can then scan for pesky viruses.
"republican national socialism has been detected. would you like to uninstall?"
"Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." -Jesus Christ The Lord's Prayer
Back in the 70's, when industrial automation seemed to get kicked off, I remember "them" saying "Hey - this will be great - we'll let the robots do the crappy work, and we will be all better off for it!"
So, what happened? The lots of automotive paint guys were discovered to be redundant, and had to desperately find something else to do.
So - what benefit will it be to save our brains? A life time of accounting? Trying to keep up with the latest techno-fad? J2EQWEEE or some other jibberish?
When was the last time you chatted with your grandfather? Do we really appreciate the elderly? Nope - they're dinosaurs or old farts who just get in the way of techonology, right? Who's VCR is flashing? Besides the chick on NPR, it's the old foggies.
So, tell me, how is this a great idea? We make things easier for ourselves, but then we just raise the bar and screw over our neighbor (he's lazier than I am, you see, so he doesn't deserve that new car.)
There's another name for 'Futurologist'. It's 'Fortune Teller'. There's nothing scientific in his 'prediction'.
Anyone with an ounce of intelligence avoids paying ridiculous amounts of money to fool themselves into believing that what they want to hear is true because some nut job con artist says it shall come to pass.
In any case, if I had to place bets, I'd bet this guy was wrong about the timescale. But guess what in 2050 he'll be dead and you won't be able to tell him I told you so. (Funny that his prediction comes to pass after he does. Coincidence? I think not.) Meanwhile he's invested the money he made making BS predictions and lived a full and happy life at the expense of idiots he could fool.
Reminds me about a certain CEO at a certain large database company rabbiting on about thin client taking over the world. Only he was dumb enough to make a prediction that would have to come true in his own lifetime.
Me cynical? Nahhhh!
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
"Exactly. So instead of building a smart computer program, we build a simple computer program: a brain/nerve tissue simulator/interpreter. This requires very little understanding of how consciousness actually works. It does however require a very good computer, and a lot of medical research to understand how neurons really work."
I think you are assuming that if we know how neurons really work we could make a self aware computer. I believe that logic is non sequitur.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Futurologist? what the hell... so its like whetherman except you wont be held accountable because by the time your proven wrong, your dead.
id love to sit around and make all sorts of predictions...
Mike
I heart the RIAA & MPAA, im sure its mutual...
We would probably be able to read the mind like a book. How long till this is used in every court case as the ultimate lie detector?
If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
Well, if you read some high level mystics like Jiddu Krishnamurti you'll see they agree that the "I" is an artificial construct made up of memories, artificial construct that has to be made disappear by achieving a total understanding of it. Only then you can transcend and be transformed to some superior kind of conscienciousness where you understand what immortality really is, stopping a cycle of reincarnations where those memories somehow converge into a new brain tuned to the field created by those old memories (karma) giving the individual the ilusion of continuity of identity ( I guess under hypnosis or something...). So, if all this is true, moving your memories to another brain would create a subjective impression of continuity of identity without having to believe in some immortal soul concept that we conveniently created to make us think we can personally keep something of all we have accumulated. So, what is really immortality, the soul, etc? Read all about it (or most of it) here: "The first and last freedom" by Jiddu Krishnamurty, the closest I've seen to a scientific explanation of oriental mystical concepts.
Of course it's going to be expensive when it first comes out. Most new technology is.
This is here so you don't ignore the last two lines of my posts.
To exist on in cyberspace doesn't sound too appealing to me. You would then have to put up with crazy relatives carrying you around on their pocket computer, and bothering you whenever they felt lonely. Plus you might get dropped in the toilet. I will take my chances in the afterlife.
The idea of downloading your brain reminds me of the forgettable Schwarzenegger movie The 6th Day. Even though the movie was crap it made me think of the following:
"Tin Man" where SG-1 returns to Earth only to find they are robots. They have all the memories of the originals and truly believe they are the originals. It turns out that they are perfect copies and the originals still exist. It is also simalar to the STNG episode where Riker is duplicated.
If you make a copy of yourself and then you die, that doesn't help you any, if anyone asked the copy he would insist he was you. How would anyone ever know for sure?
If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
But if we are four dimensional, then we are the "same" people throughout our lives. Also, I don't know if computers have intentionality, as humans do.
Once people's brains are stored on hardware, we will be able to run a programs to search for worthy intelligence. If an individual is too dull, rm -R /Johnnys_brain
Also this means that we can prove that someone is an idiot and there is nothing they can say about it.
Unfortunately, he is also predicting that the process will be only available to the wealthy for years after its release.
As always, The Simpsons provides the commentary:
"Well, sure, the Frinkiac-7 looks impressive, don't touch it, but I predict that within 100 years, computers will be twice as powerful, 10,000 times larger, and so expensive that only the five richest kings of Europe will own them."
I couldn't tell if you were experimenting with poor-man's cryogenics or looking for the orange sherbet.
wrote a short story about this, i called it brain dumping. in my story the entire poluation was dumped into computers, and several 1000 years later aliens visited earth, and when they found no one living the build the now delapidated citys and such, they felt teh race was killed off and so when they left, they "turned out the lights" and inadvertantly wiped out the human race.
If you're brain is copied to multiple real or virtual humans, what do you feel? do you control all of them at once? Only the first one? What happens?
All the porn you watch over the years! wow!! downloaded to the drives... with all the fast forwards, etc
Don't worry, chances are we were previously uploaded and are already living in a simulation.
http://www.simulation-argument.com/
Yes, it is, from an external perspective. I'm not interested in solipsist nonsense about how it "feels" or how it appears to my individual consciousness.
I'm Neo. I take the pill that wakes me up to reality. And the reality is - a duplicate of me is not me, no matter how IT happens to feel about it.
The Star Trek novels "Price of the Phoenix" and "Fate of the Phoenix" dealt with this issue rather well. The conclusion was a person IS his continuity, which is another way of saying a person is his trajectory in space-time. Being an exact duplicate of someone else gives you no claim on anything he has, no matter how you are forced to feel about it due to the fact that your entire existence up to a minute ago was his.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Quoting the story:
'You can also start automating an awful lot of jobs. Instead of phoning up a call center and getting a machine that says, "Type 1 for this and 2 for that and 3 for the other," if you had machine personalities you could have any number of call staff, so you can be dealt with without ever waiting in a queue at a call center again.'
Interesting. How will this affect the entire world's economy?
No more jobs for the living, because they're being done by long since dead people?
A transfer in one direction does not imply the opposite transfer from the opposite point of view. You cannot substitute upload and download with transmit and receive.
This is true, but it doesn't change the definitions or usage of the words. No one was claiming these were synonymous. The put/get thing was a simplification of this:
You UPLOAD TO a server.
You DOWNLOAD FROM a server.
You cannot UPLOAD FROM a server.
You cannot DOWNLOAD TO a server.
That's the (miniscule) point here. It's about correct usage. People were basically saying upload can mean either direction. Similarly, you cannot send a function to a parameter. Hamburger does not eat you for dinner. Etc etc.
I think we will eliminate ourselves before we reach to the point of being able to download our brains. With ever advanced technoligies, it is getting easier and easier to make mass destruction weapons, being neuclear bombs, deadly virus, etc. As someone said it, we will be riding on a plane where every passenger is a pilot.
Interesting stuff regarding cognative impression (the stuff being talked about here) in the ilovebees.com radio drama thing. Well, kind of. Apparently, in the Halo universe, if you die becoming a spartan, they turn your brain into an AI. Would you consider Cortana a human? Machines don't have souls. I think the whole thing is kind of scary.
It won't be me - it will be a computer that thinks it's me. That's not immortality by a long shot.
You make the mistake of thinking you can educate the fundamental stupidity out of people. You can't.
cause I am an expert in...
nameology.
You can't handle the truth.
from one person to the next, really. We are different in the same ways in which we are the same.
If there was only two people in this universe and they lived forever they could in principle achieve the same that billions of people achieve over a given finite time period. No difference.
You can't handle the truth.
real men don't backup: they just upload themselves to the net, and let the rest of the world mirror it.
You can't handle the truth.
Nice to see we're all thinking of the philosophical issues...
Now for the practical - if we can 'upload' our brain/memories etc, surely we can fit a Wifi/WiMAX chip and stream porn straight into our brains 24 hours a day. Full on SensoVision(TM) (Tissues not included).
Just stay away from that bondage channel! Psychosomatic welts anyone?
This is pathetic. The average reader/viewer/listner has no chance to form a coherent picture of the future, or even our current ideas of it. But sadly, this is typical for news coverage of all topics. And it's actually one of the problems - that we treat such items as "news", where you get a notable person speak, then a few hundreds of nearly identical articles appear, then silence. In the best case the meme of "Playstation 5 will be as powerful as a human brain" will spread and settle in the brains of the public.
Instead of starting a decades-long discussion of all the implications of the future changes, instead of purposefully changing our societies to adapt to the scientific and technological advances, instead of basing our research budgets on the goal of achieving the most desirable of all possible futures, we just live as if nothing important is happening. This is beyond sad.
I don't know how you can change that, may be it's impossible in the world of corrupt democracies and commercialised mass-media, but if you personally want to understand where we are heading, check out the links in the end of this post.
Ian Pearsen is late. I remember the idiotic 21st century forecast that BT produced five years ago. Only now he starts to get things that better thinkers realised a decade ago. For some people the idea of mind uploading is not new and they already managed to present a much more comprehensive picture of the future.
Here are some of the resources outlining it:
Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
I have often wondered what the outcome would be if one's brain were to be split in half, and each half put into a different and complete body, with both halves of the original brain surviving and retaining functionality (like in a hemispherectomy)... specifically, where would *you* find yourself, and what then, is the nature of the other, surviving half?
How many syllables are there in those two first lines? Sheesh ;-) How about this?
A scientist was heard to say,
Upload my brain, that I may,
But my memory contains
Things not public domain
And I'd violate DMCA.
xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
The Futurist (Future-ologist? Seer? Scryer? Confidence man?) must attract enough attention to be relevant (or rather paid) but must avoid appearing to be a total idiot to remain relevant.
Couple'o little difficulties:
The butterfly effect would make it very likely that an error would cascade out of sync with the original. Chaos theory is actually relevant here. I suppose we don't care about errors as long as we make sure the original isn't still alive.
The entire brain would have to be read instantaneously, or else you'd have to collect and integrate a few (even in a somnolent state) diffs, where few approximates each neural impulse both within the brain and the entire nervous system. Note that neither of these problems is the same as constructing a computer of greater complexity than the brain.
Brain without body would be insane. We simulate the body? Solve that and the other issues of cellular mechanics that plague this sophomoric idea and we've arrived at teleportation.
Finally, it is perfectly likely that there are quantum events that are meaningful in the brain. As in processes that it is fundamentally impossible to eavesdrop on. Not demonstrated, but far from impossible or even unlikely. See Heisenberg, Penrose.
This is the sort of crap that gave SciFi a bad name for so long, and still embarrasses AI. If you're going to posit an asinine what-if, you'd better do something really interesting with it fast, or nobody will hear anything else.
Of course, I'd fight like hell even if somebody told me I had to die so that my doppelganger could live, teleporter or no.
To the metaphysical issues:
In _Total Recall_ the end of the movie appears to be a heroic and happy ending. Nonetheless, at that point it is entirely possible that our hero is imagining everything, completely insane, and slaughtered a lot of innocent people including his own devoted wife. That ambiguity is true to the book, and one of the things I love most about Philip K. Dick.
On continuity: This is the sort of metaphysical question that Jorge Luis Borges was adept at exploring concisely and eloquently. Even when he posited specious arguments, he remained a poet, and thus they could be beautiful.
Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
Similarly, you cannot send a function to a parameter. Hamburger does not eat you for dinner. Etc etc
You're obviously not from Soviet Russia.
Today's weirdness is tomorrow's reason why. -- Hunter S. Thompson
Or Rand McNally.
check it out, TFA even comes with /.ish comments pre-attached on page 2! No need to post, folks, nothing to see here, move on... (scrolls down 1057 posts) doh!
Be faithful to your obsessions. Identify them and be faithful to them, let them guide you like a sleepwalker. JG Ballard
So if we could download brains into computers... we could start a new Mindnet, that grows as people are added. It would be like having an IRC chat room full of Bots... only the bots actually have real personalities and memories...
Antisource - antivirus, antispam, antispyware
That's great. All we need is billions of crappy-ass computerized entities arguing over whether or not abortion should or should not be legal and using up precious processing cycles praying to their gods.
Imagine we do indeed have atom-by-atom replicating software in thr future.
If I take a coffee mug, and replicate it atom-by-atom, it is still not the original. It is a copy. It is a perfect copy, to be sure, but a copy nonetheless.
If you could indeed copy your consciousness to a computer before death, that would not save you from dieing. *You* would still die. *You* will lose consciousness and fade into nothing. The copy will live on.
You, as your current self, will gain nothing at all from this procedure. You will still die and not have any idea what the copy does or thinks, because you will cease to exist. Maybe if you consider youself to be a great man, then you could argue that society gains from not having lost your presence. But who would be that vain? Not me.
I see. I was reading into it the common P2P-er misconception (reinforced by the software's own misuse of the terms) that every upload entails a download and vice versa.
(Though a server can also be a client to another server, or even itself, further pursuit of this will get needlessly nitpicky.)
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
Well, at least one thing I think we can agree on is that terms can evolve over time, but that aspects of their core meaning should remain, and the most useful at that, in a direction that increases their utility.
We do have a need to define terms for transfer between equal (or even the same: ftp 127.0.0.1) machines. I strongly feel that it is more useful to have the usage of "to upload to" and "to download from" determined by where the actor is performing the action. Their definition relative to the stature of the machines involved is more archaic and less useful today, especially when modern usage refers to humans initiating the actions, not the machines performing them. (Especially when assigning responsibility for purposes of conviction.)
Sorry to continually fall back on FTP, but its command structure appears to me to be strongly influenced by the conventions of upload and download to describe the direction of the file transfer relative to the user's location.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
We have already simulated a simple brain before. Granted this a simple worm with 12 or so neurons but it's hard to point out why if it works with 12 you can't go to 12k, 12m or 12b.
At some point it just comes down to how accurate you method for decoding a brain is and how much processing power we get to use. I think we could build a computer network that was about as smart as a person right now but I still think it's 20+ years till the first simulated rat brain shows up.
Your hot soldier girlfriend might have something to say about it.
No. The computer wouldn't be self-aware. The program it is running would be. That program we don't need to build. It is uploaded from someones brain. What we need is good enough knowledge about how neurons work to build a simulator good enough to replace the physical brain.
I believe that logic is non sequitur.
Only because of the way you state the argument.
Here are the unstated assumptions:
And here are the stated assumptions
Together these assumptions lead to downloading as a definite possibility. On the other hand, if you insist on a completely logical argument, you shouldn't try to predict the future.
cixelsyD elpoep deen ot amrak erohw ot, uoY evitisnesni .dolc
You're still going to be interfaced to the machine, and if only for safety reasons, your mind will instruct the remote machine to pull your consciousness to it, similar to telnetting to another machine, opening an FTP connection to your laptop, and pulling your files to the remote machine (download).
Dude, put that back in your ass from whence you pulled it.
Given a choice between free speech and free beer, most people will take the beer.
"We're all copies."
Your particular copy though has the same set of experiences starting with your first memory after infantile amnesia (which is why few, if any, people remember anything before the age of ~2) and will end at death.
The point is that this viewpoint will end at death irrespective of how many other copies of you exist.