Could we copy our thoughts and feelings into a computer so we could live inside it?
Imagine your brain is like a super smart robot that thinks and feels. Now imagine you have a friend who can copy everything your robot does, every idea, every memory, even how you laugh. That friend is like a computer. If they copied your robot perfectly, your friend would be just like you, but inside the computer!
How It Works
Your brain sends messages through wires called nerves, kind of like how a telephone line sends voice from one phone to another. A computer uses electric signals instead of telephone lines, it's like a super fast and smart telephone.
If scientists could copy all your brain’s electric signals into a computer, that computer would start thinking just like you do! You might even be able to talk to the computer and feel like you're still you.
What It Takes
This wouldn’t be easy. Your brain has billions of tiny wires working together, it's like having millions of little robots all talking at once. Scientists have to figure out how to copy that huge mess perfectly, just like copying a whole room full of kids playing a game.
But if they could do it, you might live in a computer forever, and still be you!
Examples
- Imagine your brain being like a book, and the computer is a new copy of that same book.
- If we could map every thought in your brain, maybe we could put it inside a computer.
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See also
- How Does Arnold B. Scheibel - How Brain Scientists Think About Consciousness Work?
- How human neurons on a chip learned to play doom?
- How Does 2-Minute Neuroscience: Lucid Dreaming Work?
- Do Animals Have Minds like Humans?
- How a Deepfake Almost Ruined My Political Career | Cara Hunter | TED?