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  • WILLIAM SHATNER: Boston, Massachusetts, March 2018.

  • Nectome, a biotechnology startup company,

  • announces an audacious and controversial plan.

  • Their vision-- a groundbreaking technique that

  • can take the data stored inside a human brain

  • and transfer it into a computer.

  • There are companies like Nectome

  • that are attempting to preserve the brain and the mind.

  • Our methods of analyzing the connections

  • between neurons in the brain are getting really good.

  • And so eventually, we'll be able to model the connections

  • between all the neurons.

  • And at that point, we'll have a better idea

  • as to whether or not it's possible to upload

  • a brain into the Cloud.

  • But we'll have to wait and see what happens.

  • SUSAN SCHNEIDER: Uploading is the process

  • of basically copying and encoding someone's

  • mental life onto a computer.

  • Advocates of uploading believe that that

  • would really be a way for you to survive

  • the death of your brain.

  • MICHIO KAKU: And now people say, well, if I'm immortal

  • and I'm living my life inside a computer,

  • isn't that rather boring?

  • No, because this mainframe computer

  • will connect to a mechanical avatar that

  • is superhuman in every way.

  • And you will see through his eyes.

  • You'll feel through his sense organs.

  • So in other words, we will have a form of digital immortality.

  • WILLIAM SHATNER: Digital immortality--

  • the incredible notion that we might someday

  • be able to live forever.

  • But if the information inside our brains

  • can be copied and transferred like information

  • onto a computer hard drive, does that

  • mean it can keep and store everything,

  • like our personalities perhaps?

  • Or would something be lost in translation?

  • There are two issues to consider here.

  • First of all, why believe that a digital copy of you

  • is capable of being conscious?

  • The second issue is that it doesn't at all follow

  • that that being would really be you, that you are the survivor,

  • rather than a digital copy.

  • Consciousness is one of the most hard to define

  • phenomena about the human brain.

  • And it's also what separates us from all other species.

  • It's this idea that we have internal reflection.

  • Can we actually live on forever in a computer

  • and still be able to preserve all our memories,

  • all our friendships, all the different things that we love?

  • And I think that that's a very romantic notion for a lot

  • of people, that they want to feel like there's

  • a way to go on forever.

  • But you can't separate the brain from the rest of your body.

  • There are those who believe the human brain has more

  • potential than even the brain itself can imagine

  • and that its true capabilities might be limitless.

  • In some ways, we know more about the far reaches of the galaxy

  • than we do about the human mind.

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