Unknown Brain
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Voted for
There is potent...
at 8:28pm on October 2nd, 2009
Possible? In theory, yes. Everything that we see and experience, whether conscious or dreaming, boils down to a series of nerve impulses in our brains. The chemicals, hormones, and endorphins at play all serve to manipulate which neuron fires when, etc.
We'd need a lot more precision with technology first; reading brain waves isn't enough, we would literally need to monitor the state of each individual neuron involved with the dreaming process. We're not there yet, but theres no reason to believe we couldn't be there one day.
In theory, we could "reply" the dreams with a certain degree of accuracy as well- but not simply by feeding data back in. We'd need to recreate the set of signals that started the series of reactions off, and get the dopamine levels just right, etc, etc. Otherwise, the same set of signals would be interpreted differently.
It'd be a bitch and a half to pull off, but thats still a far cry from impossible.
However it would ALWAYS be EXORBITANTLY expensive. There woudln't really be any reduction in cost for this kind of technology, for reasons I'm about to explain.
The issue here is that no two people have the exact same configuration. Our neurons are concentrated in different amounts in different areas, have different sensitivity levels, and are all interconnected differently. The bulk of the connections between individual neurons form during early childhood, but even after that there is near constant change going on.
What that means is a twofold problem.
First, you would need to take a significant amount of time to "map out" a persons brain before putting together a rig customized to that person. In this case, you couldn't even use the same rig for identical twins!
Secondly, even after developing a customized rig for a patient... in a matter of months, it will no longer work, as the configuration of the patients interneural connections would have changed enough to render the old rig ineffective.
I would say it's definitely possible, but will NEVER be mainstream if invented, will be exorbitantly expensive, and because of the cost and "consumable" nature of the tech (as I explained above), it would likely only be available for expensive medical diagnosis (if any insurance company would cover it, which I find doubtful), and maybe as a toy for the disgustingly wealthy.