I've been wondering how it would feel to go through the transition and augmentation of nueral implants and would there be any difference between biological brain and silicon. More importantly, how would I be 'me' when I had completed the transition. How do I make the transition and keep my consciouss self alive, not just created a copy of me (destructive scanning)
I was thinking of a process that could be the safest way possible in ensuring that I end up on the other side of the transition as 'me'. At somepoint in the future if people like Ray Kurzweil is right then we should have the capability to scan the brain with some sort of advanced Nanotechnology and make a make a copy of it, then port it over to a machine. But I was thinking, wouldn't this just be a copy of you? and your consciouss would still be in your biological mind or non existent if undergoing destructive scanning.
I thought of a process that would ensure that at the end of the transition, I would be 'me' but not in my biological brain. Heres a few simplified steps:
1. Start off with your Brain
2. Augmentation of the brain using neural implants that take over, mimic and enhance specific areas of the brain
3. Both Neural Implants and brain work together and become one.
4. You always change as a person and continually build an identity on these new implants. Consciousness spreads, as its not located in any one particular place
5. degradation and eventual removal of biological brain
At first we will start with Brain Augmentation with neural implants that enhance our natural capabilities. With knowledge of the brain we can get these implants to become just like our biological brain and become one, to work together. Stronger connections will be made in the neural implants so the transition of 'you' meaning your experiences, memories etc, will all be stored in the nueral implants rather than completely being stored on your biological brain. Eventually biologial sections of the brain will be used less and less and soon the neural implant takes complete control over specific functions without you even noticing the transition that took place.
When some old memory is triggered, the neural implant could instantly store the memory you just had. If a memory is important enough then they will stay but now stored in the implants. If something is not important you obviously lose that memory.
When a person gets one of their Brain hemispheres removed because of problems, they are still the same person right? but with just a few disabilities or problems that can be overcome to a certain degree. We can assume that there isn't one particular part of the brain that actually stores consciousness, but it's the brain working together. Because of the continuous transition, the new and old memories would be stored on the nueral implants. We can assume that the biological part of the brain might not be much eventually since the neural implants are taking over with certain tasks as time goes by.
As a person ages and when the biological parts of the brain stop functioning properl, they can be removed after assessing the activity and damage of these areas first You will have then reached the point where your memories, experiences and your 'conscious self' will, and have been all stored on the implants (think of consciousness spreading). This is a better approach than say the destructive scanning method because it would be a slow and seamless transition. I believe it raises less questions about whether you actually make the transition.
We are always changing as people, we are never the same person that we were a few years ago. It is our experiences, feelings, memories, relationships and other things that make us who we are now. As the transition takes place all the things that make up you will be stored on the implants. In the end your conscious self exists entirely on the artificial implants that mimic the biological brain. The cool thing is, you will never notice that the transition ever took place! (other than a few good enhancements).
You create your future self by what you do today, it's a process that we go through all our lives and it continually changes who we are. The way to go when thinking about making a transition over to machine is that we slowly build up our idenitiy over time and this identity or consciousness will transfer over to machine seamlessly if we go for it in a similar way to what I described rather than the Cut & Paste approach which leaves you dead and only a copy of you on the machine.
+ updated 19/11/05 +
Edited by Matt, 19 November 2005 - 05:34 AM.