H
Hitetlen
Guest
Here in an interesting experiment. In the case of some mental disorders, the only treatment available is the separation of the two halves of the brain. This separation can be done very slowly, over the period of several months. As the separation progresses, the two halves of the brain keep communicating, sharing information and memories. The brain has an amazing capability to deal with physical damage, to compensate for possible loss of brain tissue.
When this operation is concluded, in the skull of the patient there will be two, almost identical copies of the original brain. The two halves alternately control the body, even though one half assumes control more frequently - it is the dominant half. So far, no fiction, pure facts. This experiment has been performed many times, both of humans and on primates.
Now let’s sprinkle in a little science fiction. Assume that at the end of the operation, there is a body of a recently diseased person, whose brain was destroyed in an accident. The surgeon can transplant one half of this brain into the other body. Today, this is a technically very hard operation, but there is nothing impossible about it.
So, at this moment we have two “copies” of the original person, both occupying a separate body. Two brains, which were (almost) identical at the time of the transplant, but which will be exposed to different environments after the surgery, therefore there will be two different persons, two different personalities. What about his “soul”? Did the surgeon’s scalpel somehow “trigger” the creation of a new soul? Or do these tow persons share the same soul?
What are your thoughts about it?
When this operation is concluded, in the skull of the patient there will be two, almost identical copies of the original brain. The two halves alternately control the body, even though one half assumes control more frequently - it is the dominant half. So far, no fiction, pure facts. This experiment has been performed many times, both of humans and on primates.
Now let’s sprinkle in a little science fiction. Assume that at the end of the operation, there is a body of a recently diseased person, whose brain was destroyed in an accident. The surgeon can transplant one half of this brain into the other body. Today, this is a technically very hard operation, but there is nothing impossible about it.
So, at this moment we have two “copies” of the original person, both occupying a separate body. Two brains, which were (almost) identical at the time of the transplant, but which will be exposed to different environments after the surgery, therefore there will be two different persons, two different personalities. What about his “soul”? Did the surgeon’s scalpel somehow “trigger” the creation of a new soul? Or do these tow persons share the same soul?
What are your thoughts about it?