I’ve already thrown out some speculations on this amazing, creepy future of ours. In an earlier post, I briefly wrote something about the possibility of having the sense of touch through a prosthetic. This is what I find mind blowing. In a research led by Silvestro Micera of Switzerland’s Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, they achieved this by connecting electrodes onto the nerves in the test subjects’ stump, and zapping them with a weak electrical signal. The subject could feel his missing fingers moving. They then connected sensors to a robot arm, blindfolded the subject, and handed him different objects. The subject could now feel a distinct difference between soft and hard objects. “Suddenly I could tell if it was a hard object,” Sorensen recalled, describing sensations that changed along with his grip. “The response, the feedback from the arm to my nerves and to my brain, they came very strong.” (Fox News Latino, February 06 2014)

This in itself shows the amazing potential of the human body, and considering this is the first experiment achieving this, imagine what the future brings. Look at computers twenty years ago, and compare them with todays technology. But at this point, the experiments have been done trying to achieve extensions of the existing body. What if it could be taken even further? Take a look at this. Its even more mind blowing.
A research led by Sliman Bensmaia, assistant professor at the University of Chicago, shows that monkeys with electrodes connected directly to specific areas of the brain, react in the same way they responded to physical touch. “To start, Bensmaia and his colleagues trained monkeys to focus their gaze in different directions depending on whether their index finger or fourth finger were being prodded. Microelectrodes were then placed in an area of the brain called the primary som atosensory cortex. This area represents an entire map of the body, with each neuron responsible for sensing when a different part of the skin is touched. Next, the team recorded what activity occurred and where it registered in the somatosensory cortex when a monkey had its index or fourth finger poked.” (Alyssa Botelho, 14 October 2013)
So by training the monkeys to react differently to varieties of physical touch, and then stimulating different areas of the somatosensory cortex, the scientists were able to replicate different sensations of touch without physically touching the monkey. This leads me to believe that we, at some point, will be able to replace our whole body and still have full functionality. Creepy? Awesome?

Then we have this guy called Dmitry Itzkov, the founder of the 2045 Initiative. His ultimate goal is to become a human hologram, and he has gathered a bunch of scientists and rich people wanting to fund and research this. Firstly he wants to make an avatar remotely controlled by a brain interface, the next step is to physically transplant a human brain into a functioning avatar, then he wants to upload a persons personality into an avatar, letting the person continue his or hers life with the new immortal body. Presumably. Then, by 2045, he says he’ll have the first human hologram good to go.
People are debating whether all of this is possible or not. What defines a person? Is it all in the brain? Or is it a combination of brain and body? Soul? And if we were to upload a persons mind into an artificial vessel, wouldn’t it just be cloning? What about brain transplantation?