The Future of the Mind talks of the most fascinating and least understood part of us: Brain! Kaku interviews leading scientists from top laboratories of the world and tries to see if what we have read in fiction can one day be true. Indeed, it includes questions that philosophers have been debating for centuries: Do we have a soul? What happens after we die? Do we even have to die? What would it take to produce a robot with human consciousness or emotions? The author discusses the advancements in brain-computer interfaces for the disabled, recording dream images using MRI machines, implanting memory in mice, and recent experiments in telepathy/telekinesis and even mind control.
The book is divided into 3 parts; each part probes future technologies, and the future of the societies that will exist centuries from now.
Part I discusses how important physics is for neuroscience and how revolutionary technologies like MRI, PET, DBS, etc have used basic knowledge of physics. There is a fabulous discussion on how exactly to conceptualize consciousness itself. Ins his “space-time theory of consciousness”, he defines consciousness simply as “the process of creating a model of the world using multiple feedback loops in various parameters in order to accomplish a goal.”
Part II discusses how these technologies will help us perform telepathy, manipulate thoughts & memories, and how to enhance intelligence. For example, scientists can already predict with 80% accuracy what specific words or numbers a subject is thinking. This is done by looking at the electric signals within the brain and comparing it with known patterns (on which part of the brain lights up when we think of say the number 7).
Part III again talks about consciousness, and possibilities related to mind-altering technologies, and explores ideas straight out of science fiction like one day our physical bodies will be too cumbersome to travel to other galaxies through deep space so we will simply leave them behind while projecting our consciousness in space.
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