You’re talking about a “creamed” brain—one in which the individual cells are separated from each other on an individual level. I was explicitly specifying a brain that is not creamed, but rather, we might say, shredded. I did admit that I didn’t know the specifics, so I’m not 100% sure that a bullet merely shreds the brain. I’m no ballistics expert.
Remember paper shredding? We used to do this to hide secrets. Many people still do it. But it doesn’t work any more. The shreds can be reconstructed. Now with scanners and computers the process can be automated. Quoting Wpedia:
After the capture of the United States embassy in Tehran during the Iran hostage crisis, shredded documents were turned over for painstaking manual reconstruction, which revealed to Iran some U.S. operations including spies. Today, scanners and computers can reconstruct shredded documents very quickly.
So, shredding a document was previously considered to effectively lose the information to entropy. No longer are we under any such delusion—with today’s technology, shredding is no longer sufficient. Now we need to burn our secrets—hence, the burn bag.
Now apply this point to the brain. If the brain was shredded, that doesn’t mean that the chunks of it can’t be reconstructed. Not today, obviously, but I wasn’t talking about today. One of the methods of revival speculated about is scanning the brain and using the data to create an upload personality. But it’s precisely scanning that makes it so easy today to reconstruct shredded documents. So even if scrambled brains seem like a mess to us—seem like a shredded document—that doesn’t mean they will provide a serious challenge to the sort of computing power involved in uploading personalities.
Also, a person can often survive massive chunks of his brain being removed. A person can survive with half his brain removed. All I see in that famous photo of Bin Laden is a little hole over one of his eyes. Maybe the whole brain was turned into cream. Or maybe only one half of his brain was creamed. If the latter, then the possibility remained that he could have been revived at a future date, had he been frozen.
You’re talking about a “creamed” brain—one in which the individual cells are separated from each other on an individual level. I was explicitly specifying a brain that is not creamed, but rather, we might say, shredded. I did admit that I didn’t know the specifics, so I’m not 100% sure that a bullet merely shreds the brain. I’m no ballistics expert.
Remember paper shredding? We used to do this to hide secrets. Many people still do it. But it doesn’t work any more. The shreds can be reconstructed. Now with scanners and computers the process can be automated. Quoting Wpedia:
So, shredding a document was previously considered to effectively lose the information to entropy. No longer are we under any such delusion—with today’s technology, shredding is no longer sufficient. Now we need to burn our secrets—hence, the burn bag.
Now apply this point to the brain. If the brain was shredded, that doesn’t mean that the chunks of it can’t be reconstructed. Not today, obviously, but I wasn’t talking about today. One of the methods of revival speculated about is scanning the brain and using the data to create an upload personality. But it’s precisely scanning that makes it so easy today to reconstruct shredded documents. So even if scrambled brains seem like a mess to us—seem like a shredded document—that doesn’t mean they will provide a serious challenge to the sort of computing power involved in uploading personalities.
Also, a person can often survive massive chunks of his brain being removed. A person can survive with half his brain removed. All I see in that famous photo of Bin Laden is a little hole over one of his eyes. Maybe the whole brain was turned into cream. Or maybe only one half of his brain was creamed. If the latter, then the possibility remained that he could have been revived at a future date, had he been frozen.