In the famous sci-fi movie “The Matrix,” there’s a scene where the female heroine, Trinity, learns to fly a helicopter by uploading instructions straight to her brain. Neuro-scientists would have to master that trick so that they could help patients suffering from brain injuries and diseases.
Scientific progress already allows scientists to tackle all the aspects of brain repair and enhancement in animals. Using electronic implants and biological techniques scientists are able to boost the memory and other functions in animals. There have even been a few lab tests where human subjects were given the opportunity to control a computer cursor with their thoughts.
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There’s no telling how today’s research will shape the world in the next 10 or 20 years, but once the tools and techniques are perfected, there’s little question competitive individuals will get swept up in a race to expand their brain capacity.
It’s been said that a Sunday edition of The New York Times contains more information than the average 19th-century citizen accessed in his entire life. We now wonder at that… But it’s possible that the electronically augumented person of 2025 will be able to absorb whole new fields of information – the knowledge we now accumulate in a lifetime – by beaming it, Matrix-style, to the circuits in his modified cortex. All that in a just a few short moments. Those people will say: “a single memory chip of ours carries twice as much information than one expert from two decades ago encountered in his entire life.”
Even if the development of this field has therapeutic purposes at it’s foundation, strong and troublesome ethical issues are raised by the prospect.
Many people are put off by the notion of physically battering the brain – the root of thought, personality, individuality and human nature itself. And not just that, but some ethicists question the wisdom of handing new brain tools over to society so that privileged individuals can exploit them to get even further ahead of everyone else.
There are of course other people that don’t see any harm in it.
The truth is that if the cost of advanced brain technologies drops quickly and the surgical risks become less dire, people may request brain chips as casual as they receive a shot of Botox or an anti-flu vaccine.
We must keep up with the times but remember to stay true to our personal and moral values.
Now, want to learn how to fly that plane that I was talking about in the title? Just hang around in this world for a little longer.
- http://odinkirk.com John
- http://odinkirk.com John
- http://odinkirk.com John
- http://odinkirk.com John
- http://armannd.com/ Titus-Armand
- http://armannd.com/ Titus-Armand



