Neil , even after re-transposition how long could the brain live --1000 years , 10000years or maybe as long as the universe ,but ultimately it will die or be destroyed at the end - time of the universe. What survives is the Truth behind life and nothing else.
On Thu, Nov 29, 2012 at 3:33 AM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote: > What survives is the gene - subject to mutations etc. We are already > 'Borg' in the sense of mass assimilation. One's mind could be > transposed to another substrate (nearish future) - our bodies are > currently replaced every 5 years or so- and the new substrate could > have nanobots that would allow minds to outlive Lee's 'hope'. Such > substrated minds might link in super-intelligence and be able to re- > transfer into more human-like bodies they learned to make. This would > be a time beyond singularity. We don't know what such intelligence > might invent or even discover - perhaps such intelligence would > discover we are not as alone as we think. Being human or human being > might be as irrelevant as a mitochondria wanting to live free again. > We might be free of the tiny machines (genes) so much part of our > behaviour now. > > On 28 Nov, 14:40, Allan H <[email protected]> wrote: >> T9 grrrrrrr >> Allan >> >> Matrix ** th3 beginning light >> On Nov 28, 2012 11:38 AM, "gabbydott" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > Ah! That's the extended version of 'possibly maybe' then (my grammar and >> > spelling checker suggests 10 instead of 'then' though)! :) >> >> > 2012/11/28 James <[email protected]> >> >> >> I am an aspect of what was, is, and will be, coextensively. Maybe. >> >> >> On 11/27/2012 2:28 AM, RP Singh wrote: >> >> >>> Attachment to life is the cause of the desire for immortality and the >> >>> readiness to believe in an after-life or re-birth. It is an off-shoot of >> >>> the instinct for survival. >> >> >>> -- >> >> >> -- >> >> > -- > > -- > > > --
