slingblade
Unregistered
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2005
- Messages
- 23,466
Despite having decent writing skills, I have not yet written a book. I'm awful at coming up with workable plots, especially endings. After much thought and note-making, though, I think I may have come up with a good idea, at last.
I am, however, a little lacking in certain areas of scientific knowledge. I'd like to pick some brains, if I may. The questions I'll ask will quickly show my lack, so please bear with me as I stumble through this, and say ignorant things.
Though I'm asking specific questions, I know they can't yet be specifically answered, but please give your best guess, and please include anything you might think of that I have not.
1) Is it conceivable that, at some point in the future, the human memory could be recorded and stored, and made available for retrieval? Could this also be done with animals, such as dogs or cats? Could such a storage system be made manageable, meaning: could we get this into a device smaller than a few football fields?
2) Could a person be cloned, and kept in some sort of storage/growth medium, while those memories were slowly fed back into the developing brain? How would atrophy be prevented? How could muscle memory be stimulated so that the person could walk, talk, eat, breathe, etc., albeit weakly, upon awakening? Would a clone need a period of re-learning, much like physical re-training for stroke victims?
I envision a future in which people have their DNA encoded and stored, enabling multiple clones, into which one's memories are then fed (hardly an original idea, I know). At some point, the "original" person would be placed into a state of unconsciousness, at which time the creation of new memories ceases. All memories from the last cloning are then retrieved and made up-to-date, as it were, with the new memories gained since his last cloning added to the old. The person is essentially immortal, although he is aware he is no longer his "original self." The previous body is destroyed, and the new body, with memory intact, is awakened.
The subjects experience a continuous memory track. They know what's being done, and they undergo it willingly. They also know that their clones begin as we all do: as blastocyst, embryo, fetus, infant, and so on. The stored memories are then fed back into the brain slowly, and the clone experiences the sensation of "living" that life as the new body matures, while essentially unconscious.
3) Would such a person also experience the "fuzziness" of early memories that we tend to experience? Or would all of his memories, even from within the womb, be rendered part of his active memory, as sharp and as clear as more recent memories, because of the way they're re-integrated into the new brain?
4) How many years' worth of new memory would one be able to integrate? Say you desired your clone to be activated when it attained 30 years of age, and deactivated at 60 or 70, and you did this multiple times. Could you fit 50, 100, 500 years' worth of memory into that brain? How much memory can one brain hold? (I'm betting we don't really know that, yet, but please do take a best guess.) If I declared in my imaginary world that we had discovered the brain's capacity for memory is unlimited, would that be believable? If not, what would you estimate the maximum upper capacity to be? e.g., a person can remember 500 years' worth, but no more, unless he were willing to give up X amount of memory.
5) Might a person experience a severe mental shock at having some of his memories wiped, to make room for more, or would he simply be unable to notice such manipulation? What are the possible risks of memory destruction, as you see them? Would the brain destroy its own memories to make room?
6) What haven't I thought to ask or consider?
Thanks in advance for any help and advice.
I am, however, a little lacking in certain areas of scientific knowledge. I'd like to pick some brains, if I may. The questions I'll ask will quickly show my lack, so please bear with me as I stumble through this, and say ignorant things.
Though I'm asking specific questions, I know they can't yet be specifically answered, but please give your best guess, and please include anything you might think of that I have not.
1) Is it conceivable that, at some point in the future, the human memory could be recorded and stored, and made available for retrieval? Could this also be done with animals, such as dogs or cats? Could such a storage system be made manageable, meaning: could we get this into a device smaller than a few football fields?
2) Could a person be cloned, and kept in some sort of storage/growth medium, while those memories were slowly fed back into the developing brain? How would atrophy be prevented? How could muscle memory be stimulated so that the person could walk, talk, eat, breathe, etc., albeit weakly, upon awakening? Would a clone need a period of re-learning, much like physical re-training for stroke victims?
I envision a future in which people have their DNA encoded and stored, enabling multiple clones, into which one's memories are then fed (hardly an original idea, I know). At some point, the "original" person would be placed into a state of unconsciousness, at which time the creation of new memories ceases. All memories from the last cloning are then retrieved and made up-to-date, as it were, with the new memories gained since his last cloning added to the old. The person is essentially immortal, although he is aware he is no longer his "original self." The previous body is destroyed, and the new body, with memory intact, is awakened.
The subjects experience a continuous memory track. They know what's being done, and they undergo it willingly. They also know that their clones begin as we all do: as blastocyst, embryo, fetus, infant, and so on. The stored memories are then fed back into the brain slowly, and the clone experiences the sensation of "living" that life as the new body matures, while essentially unconscious.
3) Would such a person also experience the "fuzziness" of early memories that we tend to experience? Or would all of his memories, even from within the womb, be rendered part of his active memory, as sharp and as clear as more recent memories, because of the way they're re-integrated into the new brain?
4) How many years' worth of new memory would one be able to integrate? Say you desired your clone to be activated when it attained 30 years of age, and deactivated at 60 or 70, and you did this multiple times. Could you fit 50, 100, 500 years' worth of memory into that brain? How much memory can one brain hold? (I'm betting we don't really know that, yet, but please do take a best guess.) If I declared in my imaginary world that we had discovered the brain's capacity for memory is unlimited, would that be believable? If not, what would you estimate the maximum upper capacity to be? e.g., a person can remember 500 years' worth, but no more, unless he were willing to give up X amount of memory.
5) Might a person experience a severe mental shock at having some of his memories wiped, to make room for more, or would he simply be unable to notice such manipulation? What are the possible risks of memory destruction, as you see them? Would the brain destroy its own memories to make room?
6) What haven't I thought to ask or consider?
Thanks in advance for any help and advice.
