Setting standards for brain preservation quality Monitoring preservation’s transition from the laboratory into clinical practice Summary The potential of preserving people for possible future [...]
Note: Because of my research developing electron microscopic imaging techniques for connectomics, I was invited to participate in the recent NIH/DOE Brain Connectivity Workshop Series discussing [...]
I think the future is bright and that humanity as a whole trends toward progress and innovation. Like many others of my generation, I grew up knowing that we face plenty of challenges in the near [...]
Note: The following is my personal opinion, and does not necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues at BPF. I am a futurist, not a neuroscientist. Any mistakes here are my own. Please point [...]
Author: BPF Co-Founder, John Smart BPF advisor Dr. Susan Blackmore recently wrote a thoughtful and insightful opinion piece, Brain preservation is a step closer, but how could it ever be [...]
Authors: Michael Cerullo and Keith Wiley One of the goals of the Brain Preservation Foundation is to spark debate on all aspects of the idea of preserving brains for future revival by uploading. [...]
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. [...]
It is sometimes claimed that it is impossible for people without strong wet-lab skills in biology and/or neuroscience to personally contribute to research associated with brain preservation. As [...]
In case you missed it, the latest issue of Skeptic Magazine [link] was focused on the question of brain uploading with three articles on the topic. The first article, by BPF President Kenneth [...]
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 [...]