Animal brain architecture is very similar to human brain architecture. There have been other surgeries for humans that have improved IQ in cases of severe debilitating disease. Naturally, nobody thought to try this on normal humans. … at least to my knowledge.
You’re talking about revascularization? It’s interesting, but would need a lot of fleshing out.
To step back a bit, I appreciate you thinking about these things and proposing ideas, but in order to make something actually work, I think there has to be a lot more in depth exploration. In particular, there’d have to be iterative maker/breaker investigation of the idea. In other words, I think you should argue against your own idea, then improve the idea and counterargue in favor, then critique the new version again, and repeat. Then for some ideas, you might actually convince yourself that the idea isn’t that workable or promising; for other ideas, you might be able to make a more convincing case and/or put together a promising version of the project.
Animal brain architecture is very similar to human brain architecture. There have been other surgeries for humans that have improved IQ in cases of severe debilitating disease. Naturally, nobody thought to try this on normal humans. … at least to my knowledge.
You’re talking about revascularization? It’s interesting, but would need a lot of fleshing out.
To step back a bit, I appreciate you thinking about these things and proposing ideas, but in order to make something actually work, I think there has to be a lot more in depth exploration. In particular, there’d have to be iterative maker/breaker investigation of the idea. In other words, I think you should argue against your own idea, then improve the idea and counterargue in favor, then critique the new version again, and repeat. Then for some ideas, you might actually convince yourself that the idea isn’t that workable or promising; for other ideas, you might be able to make a more convincing case and/or put together a promising version of the project.