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    • Mission
    • Vision (Preservation Rights)
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    • FAQ
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    • Competitors
    • Judges
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    • Staff
    • Volunteers
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  • Blog
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    • Prize Overview
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Author Archive for: "Keith"
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 Implications of the BPF large mammal brain preservation prize
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By Keith Wiley
In Brain Preservation, Mind Uploading, Cryopreservation
Posted March 13, 2018

Implications of the BPF large mammal brain preservation prize

A follow-up to the similarly titled 2016 article concerning the BPF small mammal prize Keith Wiley Author of A Taxonomy and Metaphysics of Mind-Uploading Brain Preservation Foundation fellow Mar. [...]

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 The Transporter Test and the Three Camps of Brain Preservation
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By Keith Wiley
In Brain Preservation, Mind Uploading, Cryopreservation, Cryonics, Chemopreservation
Posted June 23, 2016

The Transporter Test and the Three Camps of Brain Preservation

Reanimators, Uploaders and Uncertains — Which Are You? Take the Test, and See Where You Stand on the “Copy Problem” The first in a multi-author series on brain preservation technologies, options, [...]

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 Implications of the BPF small mammal brain preservation prize, from the prosaic to the profound
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By Keith Wiley
In Brain Preservation
Posted February 11, 2016

Implications of the BPF small mammal brain preservation prize, from the prosaic to the profound

Keith Wiley Author of A Taxonomy and Metaphysics of Mind-Uploading Brain Preservation Foundation fellow Feb. 10, 2016 On February ninth, the Brain Preservation Foundation (BPF) announced the [...]

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 Why Brain Emulation is Coming Sooner Than Many Think – A BPF Response to Dr. Miller’s NYT Editorial on Brain Emulation
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By Keith Wiley
In Brain Preservation
Posted October 27, 2015

Why Brain Emulation is Coming Sooner Than Many Think – A BPF Response to Dr. Miller’s NYT Editorial on Brain Emulation

Dr. Kenneth D. Miller, Co-Director of the Center for Theoretical Neuroscience at Columbia University, in a recent editorial in the New York Times, “Will You Ever Be Able to Upload Your Brain?”, [...]

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Contact BPF Staff

For competition information:
kenneth.hayworth@gmail.com

For technical enquiries:
kenneth.hayworth@gmail.com

For gift-giving enquiries:
johnsmart@gmail.com

For media enquiries:
oge@nnadi.org

Popular Posts
  • Ken Hayworth’s personal response to MIT Technology Review article
    Ken Hayworth’s personal response to MIT Technology Review article
    September 16, 2015
  • I’m a 19-year-old Terminal Patient. Medical Brain Preservation Should not be Difficult to Discuss or Adopt
    I’m a 19-year-old Terminal Patient. Medical Brain Preservation Should not be Difficult to Discuss or Adopt
    February 16, 2021
  • Do We Need a Noncryogenic Brain Preservation Prize?
    Do We Need a Noncryogenic Brain Preservation Prize?
    October 1, 2020
  • Scott Aaronson On The Relevance Of Quantum Mechanics To Brain Preservation, Uploading, And Identity.
    Scott Aaronson On The Relevance Of Quantum Mechanics To Brain Preservation, Uploading, And Identity.
    March 1, 2016
Disclaimer

Several companies now offer brain preservation services (aka biostasis) for human patients. The biostasis industry is presently quite young, with several new entrants, and quality-control practices vary among providers. The BPF has released a document outlining best practices that should be engaged in by all providers prior to any medical offering. Quoting from that document: “The entire procedure and associated quality control protocol should be tested in suitable laboratory animals and/or in human anatomical donations prior to any medical offering. The results of these studies should be published so that they can be reviewed by the wider medical community before any medical offering is made.”

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