Human brain implants: Why?

Why put an implant or chip in a human brain? Why?

I’m yet to see anybody giving a real good reason for putting a chip or implant in the human brain or anywhere else in the human body.

I don’t think a human brain implant can be a cure for neurological diseases and disabilities.

I see biotech designed and manufactured drugs, human genetic engineering, and human body part manufacturing and replacement biotech as the cure for neurological diseases and disabilities.

Why put something in a human brain? Why?

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What benefit would I get, if I put something in my brain, through drilling a hole through my skull, which will take three to six months to heal completely?

The only justifiable use cases for brain implants that I can see are curing human brain and nervous-system diseases and disabilities, curing nonhuman-animal neurological diseases and disabilities (such as curing blindness in dogs and cats), and doing biotech and neurotech researches particularly on nonhuman animals such as laboratory rats, guinea pigs, and human-food animals—for advancing artificial intelligence, human longevity biotech, human body part manufacturing and replacement biotech, and human-food animal disease cure biotech.

God permitting, I will get into theoretical and experimental neurotech research and development for advancing AI and biotech.

In my view, if there is any reason to put anything in the human brain, that would be for curing human brain diseases and disabilities, and enabling human longevity biotech.

If somebody has a brain cancer, or Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease, and putting a probe into the person’s brain is absolutely required for curing that disease in that person’s human brain, and if that person wants to go through the procedure on his or her own will, to not die from the brain disease, to not forever lose all the memory in that person’s brain, or to cure the motorneuron problems that person’s having, then it’s something I’m ok with.

I totally support doing anything and everything for safeguarding human health and creating cures for the currently incurable diseases, including, especially, and not limited to human brain diseases.

If installing a brain implant in a live laboratory rat or a monkey, and reading and recording and publishing the brain signals and chemicals of the laboratory rat or monkey, will help curing human brain diseases, I’m all for it.

If there’s a great cause of advancing medicine in putting brain implants in humans and nonhuman animals, I’m all for it.

Everything in science and technology must be done for human benefit. Absolutely everything, especially in biology and biotech.

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I am Allen Young; I’m an Asian-American man who focuses on advancing AI, robotics, human longevity biotech, and nuclear-fusion powered outer space tech.

Allen Young

The transhumanistic Asian-American man who publicly promotes and advances AI, robotics, human body biotech, and mass-scale outer space tech.