Since I've only read half, I've pasted a quote from a review. But my impressions so far are a constant state of awe. Each page reveals another astonishing feat that we're doing right now, and then extrapolates that current technology into the near future. We ARE unlocking the secrets of the brain. This field of science is exploding. We're like those who lived in the time right after the telescope was invented, seeing the universe open before our eyes--literally. MRI, PET, CT scans, SPECT, etc. have opened up the universe within our skulls. Currently there are three international projects to definitively decode the brain, at last determine its exact functioning. I had no idea how far along this road we are. We are reverse-engineering the brain like some alien technology dropped from the heavens, giving us the secrets of intelligence and consciousness itself.
www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookr ... eview.html
This review makes some philosophical criticism that I actually agree with, conceptually, but in terms of the technology described in the book, I'm not sure how important it is. There are ethical concerns of materialistic reductionism inherent in Kaku's technological focus, but it may be that these are eventually accounted for in an even deeper level of brain science itself, as Roger Penrose points out. The fact that the mind isn't exactly an organic computer doesn't mean that it isn't produced by the brain. Even if consciousness is an "emergent property" that can't be reduced to individual neurons, this doesn't mean that we can't eventually develop a physics that explains even the emergence itself. You might need a quantum theory of the brain, that doesn't rely upon the reductionism inherent in classical physics.Caspar Henderson wrote:
28 Feb 2014
Quadriplegics move artificial limbs with the mind. Video games are directly controlled by the power of thought. A monkey’s brain connected to the internet can control an avatar on a video screen or a robot half a world away. A mouse’s memory is erased and reprogrammed. All these and more have already happened but may be as nothing compared to what is coming.
Dreams will be videotaped. New forms of entertainment will record smell, taste and touch as well as the full range of emotions which can then be re-experienced by their audience. Scientists will build an internet of the brain, through which thoughts and emotions can be sent around the world. Spies will be able to intercept brain waves from a considerable distance. Soldiers will communicate thoughts directly to each other. And devices as fantastic as anything in Star Trek – a hand-held MRI the size of a mobile phone that, like the tricorder, can also diagnose disease, a “holodeck” where you wander in a virtual world (or a representation of a distant real world) but feel sensations when you bump into virtual objects, just as if they were real – will become feasible.
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“We have,” writes Kaku, “learned more about the brain in the last 15 years than in all of human history.” And what comes next may be even more amazing.
... describes the technologies already making possible the recording of memories, mind reading, videotaping and telekinesis (that is, the ability to move things by thinking about moving them, and linking the thought via a computer to a robot or other machine).
... One area of study is attempts to reverse-engineer the brain. At least three major efforts are under way. The Human Brain Project, a €1 billion EU initiative, aims to simulate the brain electronically on computers. The Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) initiative, funded by the US government, aims to map the neurons of the brain directly. A third project, funded by Paul Allen, billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, aims to decipher the genes that control brain development.
....Diseases such as Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and some forms of depression may be alleviated within a few years, with economic benefits that could dwarf the cost of current research. Kaku is right to highlight and celebrate this.
A second focus in Kaku’s tour of possible futures is superhuman intelligence, whether in our biological or mechanical successors. He is sceptical of the claims of singularity apostle Ray Kurzweil that the ability to upload a brain on to a computer will be feasible within a couple of decades. Good evidence supports his scepticism. As the technologist and science-fiction writer Ramez Naam argues, the problems to be overcome are non-linear. Man may be, in Nietzsche’s phrase, a bridge not a goal, but the chances are that we are a bridge with some way to go.
Still, Kaku thinks that future is not beyond reach. “Perhaps one day the mind will not only be free of its material body, it will also be able to explore the universe as a being of pure energy. The idea that consciousness will one day be free to roam the stars is the ultimate dream. As incredible as it may sound, this is well within the laws of physics.”
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