The Killing of a Sacred Disease

The Killing of a Sacred Disease

The Killing of a Sacred Disease

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When the device and Leggett began to work together, a new person emerged—a de-novo identity, a symbiosis of machine and mind

Do Brain Implants Change Your Identity?

In the popular imagination epilepsy has often been treated as a very special, exceptional condition. In the ancient and medieval periods it was associated with divine or demonic possession, and for the longest time people thought that seizures were actually triggered by some external cause, by perceiving something peculiar. People (and doctors) were in the dark about its actual causes and effective treatments. It was only after the discovery of the electric activity of the brain that we got a clue about how epileptic seizures originated in the brain: less than a century ago. Finally, thanks to measurements of electrical activity in the brain the myths about epilepsy being a form of possession or insanity could be laid to rest. This, however, has triggered a new wave of fantasies in the popular imagination.

Epilepsy is again linked to lack of (self)control. In most cases in modern media, epileptic seizures will be portrayed as a completely uncontrolled, wild convulsion of the entire body, often with foaming at the mouth and incoherent speech. However, in many cases this is not how an epileptic episode manifests. The disturbance in the electric activity of the brain can have many varied effects, from short loss of consciousness, to uncontrolled movements in one limb, to simply going limp. Sometimes entirely different causes might provoke a non-epileptic seizure.

Nevertheless, we now knew where to start looking for a treatment: inside the brain. In order to prevent the chaotic electrical activity to spread from one brain hemisphere to the next, one treatment included separating the two brain halves. Other attempts focused on removing the parts of the brain causing the disturbance. Unfortunately, the brain is incredibly complex and tampering with it might nor yield the expected results. By removing just a small slice of the temporal lobe, the entire mechanism for storing memories was disrupted for Henry Molaison: one of the most famous patients in neuroscience, known for decades only as “H.M.”. His clinical history inspired the movie “Memento”. Tragically, it is thought the collective histories of such errors and misjudgements that we slowly were groping our way out of the dark and towards a better attempt at a treatment or cure for epilepsy..

A new generation of brain implants seems to show a light at the end of the tunnel. By closely monitoring electrical activity in the brain, they can predict and prevent seizures from occurring, either by warning the patient to take precautions or by preventing them automatically. Given the long history of epilepsy as loss of control in the popular imagination, immediately the question of autonomy and identity is brought up. How does having a monitoring device in your brain affect you? How can you trust it? Will it change who you are? It is important to remember that for many epileptic patients (and other affect by brain diseases) these questions also come up with respect to their own brains.

Can one trust one’s own brain, if it produces random and unexpected seizures?

How does that affect your autonomy, agency, identity?

Invasive though they may be, the new generation of brain-computer interfaces are all geared towards restoring the autonomy of the patient, by preventing the disease to dominate their lives and curbing their freedom.

Can you drive? Can you swim? Can you be who you want to be?

Henry Molaison, desperate for help, was more than willing to let a surgeon carve away a piece of his brain to get peace of mind. Thankfully we do not have to go so far anymore to help epileptic patients recover a measure of normality. Still, it is hard to have to rely on an “external” device to recover some of your autonomy. It is hard to shake the feeling that such a device, helpful though it may be, als exercises some control over you. Being tied to a piece of equipment for the rest of your life, can be daunting. However, researchers and doctors keep building on and overcoming the limitations of current technologies and treatments. It may very well be that in the near future a new type of approach becomes possible that may be able to heal epilepsy, by restoring control to the brain. Then patients would no longer have to trade divine possession for possession by a device.

See Christian Jarrett “Great Myths of the Brain” (Wiley 2014) for a more thorough discussion of epilepsy myths.

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To Humanity and Beyond

To Humanity and Beyond

To Humanity and Beyond

The case of the use of the abacus by Japanese school children and adults provides an illustration of how thoroughly the historical processes involved in the development of a tool’s use becomes incorporated into a culture-specific technology while simultaneously becoming a part of human nature ..
We Have Met Technology and It Is Us

Cole & Derry 2005

Manuel, Cho and Sam are talking about the following paper:
Enhancement, ethics and society: ..

In this post the images comes from:

      1. Cottonbro from Pexels
      2. Vine from Pexels

In this post the dialogue is realised by an interaction of virtual characters, for more information please check the page “Virtual characters

Group Chat

Manuel, Cho, Sam

Manuel

Let’s get down to earth again. Prosthetics generally replace a missing limb, but cognitive tools seem to do something different, right?

Today 15:48  

Cho

Limb or organ, but OK  😊                                                               

Today 15:50  

Sam

The categories do overlap though, you can definitely see some brain implants as cognitive tools

Today 15:51   

Manuel

OK, examples? 😉

Today 15:51  

Sam

Deep Brain stimulation to improve memory in Alzheimer patients 

Today 15:52   

Cho

Indeed, and this also improves memory in non-impaired people, so can be considered an enhancement too

Today 15:52  

Manuel

Right, so cognitive tools aren’t just handheld devices, but can also be prosthetics or implants

Today 15:53 

Manuel

With all the tools and technologies we have nowadays, do we live in some kind of sci-fi future? 👾

Today 15:53 

Sam

Ha! 🤔 I’m sure some would see it as a dystopia! Everything controlled by computers we no longer understand …

Today 15:54   

Cho

That actually is a serious issue. Things have gotten incredibly complex and no single person understand everything anymore

Today 15:55  

Cho

Just think of surgery: most surgeries require a large team and a lot of infrastructure, not just a dude with a saw …

Today 15:55

Sam

That’s right, same thing for computers. Remember the y2k panic? Year 2000 problem

Today 15:56   

Sam

People thought the millennium bug would cause the end of the world!

Today 15:56   

Sam

Both individual computers and especially computer networks have become hugely complex. Not just two guys in a garage…

Today 15:57   

Manuel

Ok, so a lot more specialization and collaboration.

Today 15:58  

Cho

Sam mentioned brain prosthetics earlier: it won’t be long before we have brain prosthetics with AI

Today 15:59  

Cho

I’m quite sure that this would be considered an enhancement by most, and scary by many.

Today 15:59  

Sam

Right, it might not be literally rocket science, but it does bring together two of the most complex and advanced fields

Today 16:00   

Manuel

Computers and the brain, neither of which we fully understand yet?

Today 16:01  

Sam

Well, we design the computers, but artificial neural networks are indeed hard to explain

Today 16:01   

Cho

Asking people to let an implant “do their thinking for them” requires a lot of trust

Today 16:02  

Manuel

Wow, this has been great, thank you both so much for your input! 😊

Today 16:03  

… Continue reading our conversations that are posted every Saturday …

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Going Into a Limb

Going Into a Limb

Going Into a Limb

The distinction between a “tool” and a prosthesis that is implanted into the body is more apparent than real. …

Anderson 2007

Manuel, Cho and Sam are talking about the following paper:
Neuro-Prosthetics, the Extended Mind, and Respect for Persons with Disability

In this post the images comes from:

      1. Vlada Karpovich from Pexels
      2. Ivy Son from Pexels
      3. Anna Shvets from Pexels

In this post the dialogue is realised by an interaction of virtual characters, for more information please check the page “Virtual characters

Group Chat

Manuel, Cho, Sam

Sam

I’m not sure these count as prosthetics or enhancement, but we all use devices to improve ourselves

Today 15:44   

Sam

I use GPS, map, and navigation software to plan my route, but I could do it on my own

Today 15:44   

Sam

But for people with cognitive impairments devices like that become essential for day to day activities

Today 15:45   

Manuel

I see what you mean: one person’s enhancement is another person’s cure, so to say

Today 15:48  

Cho

The same happens in medicine, where sensors and smart devices are use to speed recovery, say, in physiotherapy

Today 15:50  

Cho

but also to help athletes reach peak performance. Restoring and enhancing are on the same slippery slope

Today 15:50  

Manuel

Can we compare cognitive tools to “prosthetics for the mind”?

Today 15:51  

Sam

That sounds a bit weird, but maybe? I mean, pencil and paper would qualify as cognitive tool …

Today 15:51   

Cho

If you put shoes in the same category as prosthetic legs, sure, but it stretches the usual meaning quite a bit

Today 15:52  

Manuel

OK, maybe that goes too far, and indeed we all seem to use tools like that all the time. So we’re all enhanced?

Today 15:53 

Sam

Depends on what your baseline is. I’ve got a smartwatch, but my grandfather could tell the time and predict the weather just by looking at the sky

Today 15:54   

Cho

Indeed, replicating the same functionality but with different means, isn’t really enhancement

Today 15:54  

Manuel

Right, so if we just keep doing the same things, but now with tools, it’s not really enhancement?

Today 15:55  

Cho

Think about this example: people used to have to memorize a lot of things, like phone numbers

Today 15:56  

Cho

Now we can just look them up. It is quicker, but not radically different

Today 15:56  

Sam

Right, we can make calls from the middle of nowhere, instead from a fixed phone, but that’s just improvements in infrastructure

Today 15:57   

Sam

I mean, we wouldn’t consider switching cars for horses an “enhancement” in the human body or functionality?

Today 15:57   

Manuel

I guess not, but shouldn’t we then discuss overall progress too? Like at the level of humanity, aren’t we all enhanced in a sense?

Today 15:58  

Cho

That’s an interesting point … also from a medical point of view. Better hygiene, antibiotics, vaccines, give us incredible lifespans compared to cavemen

Today 15:59  

Sam

And better communication and transportation have allowed for very different types of societies. So out tools do make us better!

Today 15:59   

Manuel

Better humans? Superior humans?

Today 16:00  

Cho

Ouch, that sounds wrong. Maybe better at being human?                 

Today 16:00  

Sam

Ok, fair enough, that sounds more like it

Today 16:01   

Manuel

So as individuals and as humanity we have progressed through tool use and by further integration with our tools …

Today 16:02  

… Continue reading our conversations that are posted every Saturday …

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What I have just said of the network, on its structure and, above all, on the fact that all the parts of the central nervous system make up a part of it, proves the anatomical and functional continuity between nerve cells.

read more
The Mental Node

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My view is that this gland is the principal seat of the soul, and the place in which all our thoughts are formed. The reason I believe this is that I cannot find any part of the brain, except this, which is not double …

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A Healthy Brain is a Joy Forever

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Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only, arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, griefs and tears. [… ] And by the same organ we become mad and delirious, and fears and terrors assail us […] All these things we endure from the brain, when it is not healthy

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I do think that robots deserve rights and there are research projects being carried out today that are looking at robot laws. African-American slaves were given rights when slavery was abolished and they became part of society. Think of animals too – none of them had rights in the beginning but now animal rights are the norm. So if robots can interact with humans, they too should be given rights.

read more
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He clasped the beautiful Olympia, and with her flew through the dance…
He thought that his dancing was usually correct as to time, but the peculiarly steady rhythm with which Olympia moved, and which often put him completely out, soon showed him that his time was most defective

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The Sum of the Parts vs the Whole

The Sum of the Parts vs the Whole

The Sum of the Parts vs the Whole

The firm should have the right to take back what it produced — the collection of artificial organs illegally masquerading as Mr Jones and present in this court-room even now …

Stanislaw Lem 1968

Manuel, Cho and Sam are talking about the following paper: ARE YOU THERE, MR JONES?

In this post the images comes from:

      1. Min An from Pexels
      2. Tara Winstead from Pexels

In this post the dialogue is realised by an interaction of virtual characters, for more information please check the page “Virtual characters

Group Chat

Manuel, Cho, Sam

Cho

There’s been a lot of discussion in the medical community about enhancement 

Today 15:39  

Cho

The same drug can be a treatment for one person and an enhancement for the next

Today 15:39  

Manuel

I did hear about that indeed. So would you say this is also the case for prosthetics?

Today 15:42  

Cho

Absolutely! Just think about the controversy about Oscar Pistorius 

Today 15:43  

Cho

His competitors insisted that his prosthetics gave him an unfair advantage: an enhancement 😊

Today 15:43  

Sam

If I can chime in on this point, not a prosthetic, but there was a similar controversy about running shoes 😅

Today 15:44   

Manuel

Running shoes? Well, in a sense we might consider shoes as some kind of prosthetic … 😅

Today 15:44 

Sam

Maybe, but thanks to these spring-loaded soles Eliud Kipchoge ran the first marathon under 2 hours

Today 15:45   

Cho

Oh yes, I remember that bit of news! It was quite a big deal… lots of assistive technology too 👍

Today 15:46  

Sam

It didn’t really count as an official record, but it did show what technology can do to improve performances                           

Today 15:47   

Manuel

Even though it didn’t count as world record, it still counts for our article! 😊 I’d say this is enhancement too

Today 15:47  

Sam

I would say so too, but I also think we should distinguish between tools and prosthetics …

Today 15:48   

Manuel

Good point! What do you think, Cho?

Today 15:48  

Cho

I’m not sure you can make a clean break between those two, there will always be grey area’s

Today 15:49  

Cho

Does it only count as a prosthetic if you cannot take it off? Between a crutch and an artificial hip there’s a lot of room for discussion

Today 15:49  

Sam

That’s right, same goes for cognitive tools, it’s a sliding scale.

Today 15:49   

Manuel

Cognitive tools? 🤔

Today 15:50  

Sam

Yes: like pocket calculators, or basically any utility app on your smartphone …

Today 15:50   

Cho

I couldn’t get anything done without my digital to do lists and calendar! 😊

Today 15:50 

Sam

Basically, those enhance your memory: cognitive tools

Today 15:51   

Manuel

I see what you mean, but that seems another category again! 😊

Today 15:51  

… Continue reading our conversations that are posted every Saturday …

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (4 votes, average: 4.25 out of 5)
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Related post

Brainless Myths

Brainless Myths

What I have just said of the network, on its structure and, above all, on the fact that all the parts of the central nervous system make up a part of it, proves the anatomical and functional continuity between nerve cells.

read more
The Mental Node

The Mental Node

My view is that this gland is the principal seat of the soul, and the place in which all our thoughts are formed. The reason I believe this is that I cannot find any part of the brain, except this, which is not double …

read more
A Healthy Brain is a Joy Forever

A Healthy Brain is a Joy Forever

Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only, arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, griefs and tears. [… ] And by the same organ we become mad and delirious, and fears and terrors assail us […] All these things we endure from the brain, when it is not healthy

read more
Robot See, Robot Do

Robot See, Robot Do

I do think that robots deserve rights and there are research projects being carried out today that are looking at robot laws. African-American slaves were given rights when slavery was abolished and they became part of society. Think of animals too – none of them had rights in the beginning but now animal rights are the norm. So if robots can interact with humans, they too should be given rights.

read more
Coppélia 2.0

Coppélia 2.0

He clasped the beautiful Olympia, and with her flew through the dance…
He thought that his dancing was usually correct as to time, but the peculiarly steady rhythm with which Olympia moved, and which often put him completely out, soon showed him that his time was most defective

read more
Embodied Bodies

Embodied Bodies

Embodied Bodies

Once incorporated into a body, then, a prosthesis is no longer merely an object, in the sense that we can no longer straightforwardly deny that it has or plays a role in a person’s subjectivity

Walker 2019

Manuel, Cho and Sam are talking about the following paper:
On Replacement Body Parts

In this post the images comes from:

      1. Polina Tankilevitch from Pexels

In this post the dialogue is realised by an interaction of virtual characters, for more information please check the page “Virtual characters

Group Chat

Manuel, Cho, Sam

Manuel

Julia pointed out to us that medical technology is both extremely old and has always been linked with sci-fi or mythology

Today 15:38   

Manuel

Apparently the first-ever mention of a prosthetic leg dates back over 3000 years to the Indian Rig Veda “Vishpala

Today 15:38   

Cho

That is indeed extremely old, but I do know that cavemen already performed brain surgery, so …😊                                                         

Today 15:39  

Sam

But this is mythological, right? I’m not sure how advanced it was … did it have moving joints?

Today 15:40   

Manuel

We don’t really know, but we have an actual prosthetic big toe from Egypt from around the same time “Ancient Egyptian’s wooden toe is sophisticated prosthetic

Today 15:42  

Cho

That would actually be more advanced than a simple peg leg!

Today 15:43  

Manuel

The first moving joints were developed in the middle ages, as far as we know.

Today 15:43 

Sam

Yeah, I suppose that wooden prosthetics rarely survived intact

Today 15:44   

Manuel

There’s a Roman artificial leg, but no joints “Copy of Roman artificial leg, London, England, 1905-1915

Today 15:45  

Cho

I do know some of this history, but I suppose you are also going to look to the future?

Today 15:46  

Manuel

Oh, absolutely! The point is that mythology and then sci-fi are full of amputations and replaced limbs

Today 15:46  

Sam

Sorry for being a nerd, but we will get to Darth Vader at some point, right?😊                                               

Today 15:47   

Manuel

Ha! Sure, that’s a great example actually. At some point we slip from just replacing, to improving.

Today 15:47  

Cho

Now I see where you are going with this, yes. When is a prosthetic healing and when enhancing?

Today 15:48  

Sam

I guess that this is linked to, well, an engineering mindset, I’d say.     If the body is a machine, we can repair as well as improve it.

Today 15:49   

Manuel

See? This is exactly why I needed both of you for this! When is something actually “enhancement”?

Today 15:50  

Cho

There are quire a few ethical problems linked to that … doctors “playing god” and all that.

Today 15:50 

Sam

Same here: as soon as you start talking about an AI that is more than human, things get really complicated.

Today 15:51   

Manuel

I’m looking forward to hearing all about it!

Today 15:52  

… Continue reading our conversations that are posted every Saturday …

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Total posts on the argument

Brainless Myths

Brainless Myths

What I have just said of the network, on its structure and, above all, on the fact that all the parts of the central nervous system make up a part of it, proves the anatomical and functional continuity between nerve cells.

read more
The Mental Node

The Mental Node

My view is that this gland is the principal seat of the soul, and the place in which all our thoughts are formed. The reason I believe this is that I cannot find any part of the brain, except this, which is not double …

read more
A Healthy Brain is a Joy Forever

A Healthy Brain is a Joy Forever

Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only, arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, griefs and tears. [… ] And by the same organ we become mad and delirious, and fears and terrors assail us […] All these things we endure from the brain, when it is not healthy

read more
Robot See, Robot Do

Robot See, Robot Do

I do think that robots deserve rights and there are research projects being carried out today that are looking at robot laws. African-American slaves were given rights when slavery was abolished and they became part of society. Think of animals too – none of them had rights in the beginning but now animal rights are the norm. So if robots can interact with humans, they too should be given rights.

read more
Coppélia 2.0

Coppélia 2.0

He clasped the beautiful Olympia, and with her flew through the dance…
He thought that his dancing was usually correct as to time, but the peculiarly steady rhythm with which Olympia moved, and which often put him completely out, soon showed him that his time was most defective

read more