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The immortalist: Uploading the mind to a computer

2016-03-14 17:21:07

14 March 2016

While many tech moguls dream of changing the way we live with new smart devices

or social media apps, one Russian internet millionaire is trying to change

nothing less than our destiny, by making it possible to upload a human brain to

a computer, reports Tristan Quinn.

"Within the next 30 years," promises Dmitry Itskov, "I am going to make sure

that we can all live forever."

It sounds preposterous, but there is no doubting the seriousness of this softly

spoken 35-year-old, who says he left the business world to devote himself to

something more useful to humanity. "I'm 100% confident it will happen.

Otherwise I wouldn't have started it," he says.

It is a breathtaking ambition, but could it actually be done? Itskov doesn't

have too much time to find out.

"If there is no immortality technology, I'll be dead in the next 35 years," he

laments. Death is inevitable - currently at least - because as we get older the

cells that make up our bodies lose their ability to repair themselves, making

us vulnerable to cardiovascular disease and other age-related conditions that

kill about two-thirds of us.

o Itskov is putting a slice of his fortune in to a bold plan he has devised to

bypass ageing. He wants to use cutting-edge science to unlock the secrets of

the human brain and then upload an individual's mind to a computer, freeing

them from the biological constraints of the body.

"The ultimate goal of my plan is to transfer someone's personality into a

completely new body," he says.

Itskov's interest in making the impossible possible began as a child in the

Soviet Union in the 1980s. "My biggest dream was to be a cosmonaut, to fly in

to outer space," he says. One science fiction novel made a lasting impression:

"The hero took some immortality pill and he ended up flying the orbit of Earth.

I remember myself questioning what I was going to do if I'm immortal."

But does his plan to allow us all to upload our minds to computers amount to

anything more than sci-fi? The scientific director of Itskov's 2045 Initiative,

Dr Randal Koene - a neuroscientist who worked as a research professor at Boston

University's Center for Memory and Brain - laughs off any suggestion Itskov

might have lost touch with reality.

"All of the evidence seems to say in theory it's possible - it's extremely

difficult, but it's possible," he says. "So then you could say someone like

that is visionary, but not mad because that implies you're thinking of

something that's just impossible, and that's not the case."

The theoretical possibility Randal refers to is rooted in questions about how

our brains work that neuroscience has yet to answer. Our brains are made up of

about 86 billion neurons, connected cells that send information to each other

by firing electrical charges that propagate through this organ in our skulls

like waves.

But exactly how the brain generates our mind is a mystery like no other in

science, according to the neurobiologist Prof Rafael Yuste of Columbia

University. "The challenge is precisely how to go from a physical substrate of

cells that are connected inside this organ, to our mental world, our thoughts,

our memories, our feelings," he says.

To try to unlock its workings, many neuroscientists approach the brain as if it

were a computer. In this analogy the brain turns inputs, sensory data, into

outputs, our behaviour, through computations. This is where the theoretical

argument for mind uploading starts. If this process could be mapped, the brain

could perhaps be copied in a computer, along with the individual mind it gives

rise to.

That's the view of Dr Ken Hayworth, a neuroscientist who maps slivers of mouse

brain at the Janelia Research Campus in Virginia by day, and by night grapples

with the problem of how to upload his mind. Ken believes mapping the connectome

- the complex connections of all the neurons in a brain - holds the key,

because he believes it encodes all the information that makes us who we are,

though this is not proven. "In the same sense that my computer is really just

the ones and zeros on my hard drive, and I don't care what happens as long as

those ones and zeros make it to the next computer it should be the same thing

with me," he says, "I don't care if my connectome is implemented in this

physical body or a computer simulation controlling a robotic body."

But Ken is a realist. "We are pitifully far away from mapping a human

connectome," he acknowledges. "To put it in perspective, to image a whole fly

brain it is going to take us approximately one to two years. The idea of

mapping a whole human brain with the existing technology that we have today is

simply impossible." And there's another theoretical challenge. Even if we could

create the wiring diagram of a human brain, mind uploading would also most

likely require reading the constant activity of all its neurons too.

Here Itskov might get some unexpected help, according to Yuste - who helped

bring about the world's biggest neuroscience research project, the Brain

Initiative. As part of this $6bn American programme aimed at solving the

mysteries of brain disorders like Alzheimer's, he is hoping to map the

continual interaction of neurons - the patterns of firing - in the brain over

time, "We want to measure every spike from all the neurons at once

simultaneously. Many people said it's just impossible."

It is an approach that does not rely on mapping the connectome first. In

research yet to be published, Yuste has for the first time imaged over time the

hypnotic electrical flashes that make up the activity of nearly all the neurons

- up to several thousand - in one of the simplest nervous systems in evolution,

a tiny invertebrate called a hydra. "It was very exciting," he says. But "today

we just cannot tell you what these patterns mean. So it's a bit like listening

in on a conversation in a foreign language that you don't understand."

Within 15 years Yuste hopes to map - and interpret - the activity of all the

neurons in a mouse cortex. But the ultimate aim is to read the activity of the

human brain.

"If the brain were a digital computer, if you wanted to upload the mind you

need to be able to decipher it or download it first. So I think the Brain

Initiative is a step that is necessary for this uploading to happen."

But Itskov is far from home and dry. At Duke University, one leading

neuroscientist argues that the brain's dynamic complexity - from which the

human condition emerges - cannot be replicated. "You cannot code intuition; you

cannot code aesthetic beauty; you cannot code love or hate," says Dr Miguel

Nicolelis, who is developing a mind-controlled exoskeleton aimed at helping the

paralysed walk. "There is no way you will ever see a human brain reduced to a

digital medium. It's simply impossible to reduce that complexity to the kind of

algorithmic process that you will have to have to do that."

For the next few centuries I envision having multiple bodies... my

consciousness just moving from one to another

Dmitry Itskov, Founder of 2045 Initiative

Yuste is also very far from certain the brain works like a computer and could

ever be copied in a machine. But because neuroscience cannot yet explain how

exactly the brain gives rise to us and prove that mind uploading is impossible,

he believes society should start considering what the consequences might be if

Itskov succeeded in his ambition.

"The pathway that leads with the new neural technologies to our understanding

of the brain is the same pathway that could lead, theoretically, to the

possibility of mind uploading," says Yuste. "Scientists that are involved in

these methods have the responsibility to think ahead."

Mind uploading would usher in a world fraught with risks.

"If you could replicate the mind and upload it into a different material, you

can in principle clone minds," says Yuste. "These are complicated issues

because they deal with the core of defining what is a person."

Itskov is more sanguine: "I will answer you to the question of ethics by the

opinion which was given to me by his holiness the Dalai Llama when I visited

him in 2013. His point was that you can do everything if your motivation is to

help people."

But this assurance is not enough for Yuste, who sits on the Brain Initiative's

ethics panel: "I would put mind uploading in the list of the topics that should

be very carefully discussed and thought through."

Itskov is already planning his endless life. "For the next few centuries I

envision having multiple bodies, one somewhere in space, another hologram-like,

my consciousness just moving from one to another."

It is estimated that 107 billion people have died before us. As our

understanding of the brain advances in the decades ahead it will become clear

whether Itskov is really the momentous visionary he claims to be, or merely the

latest dreamer of impossible dreams.