I think the primary point overlooked when thinking about uploads is that there are milestones along the way that will greatly increase funding and overall motivation. I’m confident that if a rough mouse brain could be uploaded then the response from governments and the private sector would be tremendous. There are plenty of smart people and organizations in the world that would understand the potential of human uploads once basic feasibility had been demonstrated. The engineering project would still be daunting, of course, but the economic incentive would plainly be seen as the greatest in history.
Sorry, but with today’s industry and government sectors I don’t buy it. Not for uploads, not for aging. This awareness already happened with MNT, but it didn’t have the effect in question.
Successfully uploading a mouse brain—and possibly also the radical extension of the lifespan of a mouse—would seem to me like it’d get as much media attention as Dolly the Sheep did. Has there been some MNT demonstration that would’ve gotten an equivalent amount of publicity?
Though judging from the reaction to Dolly, the reaction might be an anti-uploading backlash just as well as a positive one.
There’s awareness of MNT, but feasibility of the more extreme possibilities hasn’t been demonstrated adequately for heavy investment. The roadmap from mouse brain to human brain is also much, much clearer than the roadmap from here to full fledged MNT.
I think the primary point overlooked when thinking about uploads is that there are milestones along the way that will greatly increase funding and overall motivation. I’m confident that if a rough mouse brain could be uploaded then the response from governments and the private sector would be tremendous. There are plenty of smart people and organizations in the world that would understand the potential of human uploads once basic feasibility had been demonstrated. The engineering project would still be daunting, of course, but the economic incentive would plainly be seen as the greatest in history.
Sorry, but with today’s industry and government sectors I don’t buy it. Not for uploads, not for aging. This awareness already happened with MNT, but it didn’t have the effect in question.
Successfully uploading a mouse brain—and possibly also the radical extension of the lifespan of a mouse—would seem to me like it’d get as much media attention as Dolly the Sheep did. Has there been some MNT demonstration that would’ve gotten an equivalent amount of publicity?
Though judging from the reaction to Dolly, the reaction might be an anti-uploading backlash just as well as a positive one.
MNT == molecular nanotechnology?
Ayup.
There’s awareness of MNT, but feasibility of the more extreme possibilities hasn’t been demonstrated adequately for heavy investment. The roadmap from mouse brain to human brain is also much, much clearer than the roadmap from here to full fledged MNT.