- #1
FreeWill
- 29
- 0
I just read that
"Even aging can't be so easily cured by replacing someone's
whole body: our brain seems to contain the circuits causing us
to age, and you'd just see the replacement aging very rapidly.
(The circuits aren't just electrical but chemical too. And this
experiment has even, in a sense, been tried, with just the
result I describe here, on animals."
If you connected somebody's (older) brain up to another (younger) brain, (physically) and put the two brains together in a new body, does that mean that the new body would age really quickly?
"Even aging can't be so easily cured by replacing someone's
whole body: our brain seems to contain the circuits causing us
to age, and you'd just see the replacement aging very rapidly.
(The circuits aren't just electrical but chemical too. And this
experiment has even, in a sense, been tried, with just the
result I describe here, on animals."
If you connected somebody's (older) brain up to another (younger) brain, (physically) and put the two brains together in a new body, does that mean that the new body would age really quickly?