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3D Bioprinting - The first stage to cloning a Capsuleers memories

Author
DrysonBennington
Eagle's Talon's
#1 - 2014-11-17 21:10:14 UTC
New 3D bioprinter to reproduce human organs, change the face of healthcare: The inside story

Researchers are only steps away from bioprinting tissues and organs to solve a myriad of injuries and illnesses. TechRepublic has the inside story of the new product accelerating the process.

http://www.techrepublic.com/article/new-3d-bioprinter-to-reproduce-human-organs/

Trying to clone the memories and personality of person may not be that far off either.

Memories stored in the brain as a child and infant is what molds our personality later on in life. The memories formed during child hood based on likes and dislikes then create patterns of thoughts and emotions within the adult. If these patterns can be retrieved from an adult brain once it matures at around age 50 and inserted into a new brain or grown inside of a new brain then the memories and personalities of a person could be transferred into any body that the human wanted to be transferred into.

For example growing up a child likes dogs, cats and turtles each with a variance of thought with cats being number one, turtles being number two and dogs being number three. Any time that a combination of words are said such as feline, paw, claws. tail, ears, whiskers, etc. are mentioned the brain would fire in a manner to produce the image of cat in the brain when enough keywords hade been said that would then invoke numerous emotions afterwards as the conversation continued on.

The keyword structures have to be stored in the brain somewhere that trigger an emotional response.
Blake March
#2 - 2014-11-18 14:51:13 UTC
Eh.

I shrug at every 'new' technology thing until it is actually used. There are always researchers 'steps away' from doing things that never happen. Every researcher in the history of ever says "we're almost there". That's how you get funding.
Uriel Paradisi Anteovnuecci
Itsukame-Zainou Hyperspatial Inquiries Ltd.
Arataka Research Consortium
#3 - 2014-11-18 21:03:14 UTC
Well outlandish sci-fi has always provided a base for future technology- just look at star trek.

We need crazy ideas to spur people to innovate!
Bagrat Skalski
Koinuun Kotei
#4 - 2014-11-18 21:51:41 UTC