Tuesday, September 15, 2015

The Cure For Death: Reversing Damage

Imagine breaking a vase into tiny little shards of glass, some so small that they grind into dust when you try and put them back together. Or imagine crumpling a piece of paper so that a million wrinkles form and even flattening it out with a book won't make them cease to exist, the creases are so embedded and even paper has begun to miss from the parts where it seems the paper was crumpled and rubbed together causing bits of it to come off. Sometimes we need new parts to exchange the old ones, hence organ transplants and what not. But replacing every little bit of the damaged object/body would be a process that's proved to be far more complicated than we can achieve. Down to every little part, every cell and it's specific functions. How would you train new cells to carry out the same functions. Maybe we'd have better luck using synthetic measures, implanting nanobots into a person's body that have been pre-trained to carry out specific actions.

Cont.

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