Thursday, February 3, 2022

Brain Organoids?

An abstract posted by Kyoto University explores the progressions being made in artificial organ transplant. 

The discussion starts by investigating the ethics of creating an artificial brain and transplanting it into animals to test success of the "organoid" in order to one day potentially place it in humans that are in need of a healthy brain. Is this kind of animal testing ethical? 

The abstract explains how consciousness is an issue here in that it cannot truly be measured or defined:

"Brain organoids have led to deep questions about consciousness. With some people imagining a future where our brains are uploaded and kept on the cloud well after our bodies die, organoids bring an opportunity to test consciousness and morality in artificial environments."

The statement regarding that brains could one day be uploaded and kept on the cloud reminded me of the scene from Harry Potter when Harry sticks his head into the pit of water (I am not sure what the actual name of the pit is) and he is able to see Professor Snape's memories. Will people one day be able to relive and experience the memories of past loved ones, friends, or in Harry's case, enemies? What are your thoughts on this? And is this ethical? 

3 comments:

  1. T brain may be the one organ that is not fungible. But, if ever it became possible to digitize, store, and transplant memory via an artificial substitute that would raise profound questions about identity and mortality. We'd better insist on human volunteers for this. Y'all go ahead of me.

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  2. It is certainly an interesting topic. If artificially generated brains were one day capable of being transplanted into human beings, it would bring up several questions: Could someone "brain dead" be brought back to "life"? If someone was in an accident with severe brain damage and had a brain transplant, would they truly be the same person? Our brain is responsible for so much of our behavior, it seems dare I say impossible for that to be replicated. Personally, I think the whole uploading memories from people's brain would be really amazing. However, I think it could only be done voluntarily, postmortem, and be given to those with explicit permission from the person.

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