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Brain transplant

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bryan Derksen (talk | contribs) at 01:42, 10 January 2003 (whups, I inadvertanty reverted my own previous addition. Fixing. Also adding a tad more detail on Raelism, just a mention of the fact that they're a religious group). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A whole-body transplant, or brain transplant, moves the brain of one being into the body of another. No technology exists to perform such transplants.

Although many scientists would challenge the feasibility of this process, few would say that it is not eventually possible given current research into organ transplant and human cloning. Most ethicists would argue that there are extreme difficulties involved in either harvesting a brain-dead body, especially one deliberately created using human cloning, or otherwise acquiring a body (say, of a criminal due to be executed for a crime, or an individual who is not dead but is soon to die of a brain-based illness).

Whole-body transplant is similar in some ways to the idea of downloading conciousness promoted by Marvin Minsky and others with a mechanistic view of natural intelligence and an optimistic outlook regarding artificial intelligence. It is also a goal of Raelism, a small religion based in Florida, France, and Quebec. However, while the 'downloaders' see the ultimate receptable of the human brain as a repairable manufactured body made by robotics, the 'transplanters' see the ultimate receptable as a new body optimized for that brain by genetics and maybe proteomics. Both goals are often derided as insane or unethical by religious and social leaders, who poitn deep to the disruption and inequality immortality of any sort is likely to cause.

The issue seems to be somewhat far off. However, it's important to note that human cloning itself seemed far off a generation ago. There have been many successful head transplants performed on monkeys by Dr. Robert White of Case Western University, and he announced in 1984 that he felt his techniques were suitably developed to work on humans.

See also: human cloning, organ transplant, Raelism, robotics