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George

Death and the brain

Recent voluntary euthanasia hullabaloos such as the Terry Schiavo case have revealed a public that’s largely divided and somewhat confused as to what death is and when it should actually be declared. This issue is set to get increased attention as a) more people vie for increased control over their right to die, b) our medical sensibilities migrate increasingly toward a neurological understanding of what it means to be ‘alive’ in a meaningful sense, and c) the realization that the potential for cryonics and other advanced neural rescue operations will give rise to an information theoretic interpretation as to when death should truly be declared.

It is customary to declare death when the heart stops beating. This only makes sense; in the past it was the practical thing to do given limited medical know how. Moreover, without ever having the phenomenon of an individual in a coma or on life support, there was no need to have an alternative conception as to when it was appropriate to declare death.

Modern technologies have twisted this practicality, however, by introducing devices that keep people alive biologically while their brains have essentially stopped working. Individuals ‘living’ in these persistent vegetative states are a particularly macabre sight: corpses that are hooked up to machines so that the blood can keep flowing.

Of course, some people today don’t see it quite this way. Many cling to the notion that life can’t possibly come to an end until the heart stops, or that some kind of ensoulment or dignity is maintained until all biological functioning ceases. In many cases, despite irrevocable damage to the brain (the word ‘persistent’ is used for good reason), many hold out for some sort of divine intervention or miraculous medical intercession.

These perspectives, however, fail to take into account personhood-based conceptions of what it means to truly be alive. Unless one is capable of ongoing subjective engagement with the world, one is not a person. Conscious existence is a necessary condition for agency, and because the brain generates consciousness, it’s fair and reasonable to suggest that we are our brains. When a brain is damaged or malfunctioning beyond repair, then the person who owns that brain should really be considered deceased.

If, on the other hand, a cognitively impaired condition is not permanent (i.e. someone in a temporary coma) and the integrity of higher brain functioning has been maintained, a person should not be declared dead. In this sense, there is still cause for hope because the fruits that can give rise to a conscious person are still intact.

This is what is referred to as an information theoretic interpretation of life and death. Functionalist and materialist conceptions of brain activity suggest that conscious individuals are the sum of their brain patterns. These patterns are expressed by tangible and measurable parts of the brain. Consequently, the ‘information’ that’s encoded in the brain and in constant flux is the person. As long as the information in the brain remains intact (i.e. the software), and provided the brain is functioning properly so that information can be computed and expressed (i.e. the hardware), a person should be considered alive – or in some cases, alive in the sense that consciousness and active personhood can be resumed at a later time.

Information theoretic death has deep implications for those interested in cryonics or the potential for mind uploading. Given the possibility for cryonic reanimation or a transferred existence into a different computational substrate, an alternative legal and medical definition of death would seem to be in order.

The argument goes as follows: If biological functioning stops for an individual, but the brain’s information can be perfectly restored and recovered at a later date, a person should not be considered permanently dead. Death, therefore, should only be declared when the information state of the brain is so disorganized that recovery is impossible.

Currently, when considering the status of an individual preserved in cryonic storage, it is not known beyond a shadow of a doubt that reanimation is impossible. In fact, with each passing year the strength of the hypothesis favouring such a possibility strengthens. Practically speaking then, cryonauts are dead -- but they have a non-zero potential for resuming life in the future.

Consequently, I’m in favour of an immediate change to our sensibilities as they pertain to the declaration of permanent death -- but I know that most of society isn’t quite ready for information theoretic death just quite yet. It will take some time before people start to acknowledge the importance of preserving the brain’s informational essence beyond biological death.

The day will come, however, when information theoretic death will become the established and legal standard for declaring a person’s permanent death. At such a time it will be information theorists rather than medical doctors who will be the ones declaring when life has truly ended.

Cross-posted from Sentient Developments.
Published Friday, May 19, 2006 6:34 PM by George

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Anne wrote on May 19, 2006 11:49 PM

Agreed -- I would also define true "death" as a state in which the brain has been physically damaged or destroyed to the point where any conceivable pattern that could be said to make up the "person" is lost.  For instance, I do not consider a well-preserved cryonics patient to be "dead", despite the legalities associated presently with this process.  However, I would certainly consider a person who had been cremated to be dead.

However, I would definitely caution potential policy-makers to be very careful about how they define "extreme cognitive impairment".  If someone can be clinically and tangibly shown to have no consciousness and no potential for consciousness, then perhaps that would be "death" -- but in the past, many people with (for example) developmental disabilities were assumed to be "less than human" or "not really people", and sadly this continues today in some situations.  Anyone looking to draw up ethical guidelines for declaring death would have to be very specific to note that *consciousness* is the factor to consider -- not supposed intelligence, not developmental level, etc.  



 

Mr. Farlops wrote on May 20, 2006 4:36 AM

It would be good to try to make this an actual legal definition but there will be a lot of opposition to it.

The other problem is that it's not just information theory that matters here. It's also practical technology. Many people aren't going to believe something until the practical technology exists and is commonplace. Recovery of minds from cryonic suspension might be theoretically possible but until advanced nanotechnology is commonplace, many will continue to doubt it. These doubts will fuel opposition to the legalization of a concept of death based on information theory.
 

CP wrote on May 20, 2006 9:12 AM

Consciousness is a factor because people are geared to be aware of consciousness or its semblance. It's the combination of factors that make things seem alive; an insect is likely not conscious but it's alive. The same can be said for  a carrot. The question then becomes whether or not a person can be returned to consciousness who has other signs of life -- reflexes, tracking movement with the eyes, and so forth. Someone who can't be now might be at some time in the future.

Getting people to accept this will involve some means of accessing signs of brain activity that could correlate with "higher" functions even if these are in suspension. I'd be in favor of it, but I have absolutely no idea of how it can be done -- some finer discrimination of brain waves, no doubt, but how to correlate them with consciousness or potential consciousness will likely require painful experiments, painful in the sense that relatives of the subjects will be upset and animal "advocates" will resist the attempt to improve life.
 

dagon wrote on May 20, 2006 2:48 PM

[conceited] I think definitions of death should avoiding declaring some people dead when they are still alive. Just look around: how many people actually live in any meaningful sense [/conceited]
 

Anne wrote on May 20, 2006 3:32 PM

dagon: I'd think that a posthuman / transhuman philosophy would necessarily include a clause that states that nobody BUT the individual can determine whether their own life has meaning.  As long as there is consciousness (ignoring for a moment the question of how to determine this from a technical standpoint), then there doesn't seem any ethical way for one person to take the authority to state that someone else's life has no meaning.
 

Afn wrote on May 20, 2006 5:39 PM

Perhaps this is the wrong comment for this post, but I think we are missing an important issue. Once the brain is uploaded from a living person, your physical brain and your copy of your physical brain begin to have different experiences.

For what it is worth, I think mind uploading will be an extrapolation of intelectual property. Brains will be traded, sold and perhaps marketed. I see it less of an issue of biological death and more of an information problem. Granted, if you physically die after a brain upload, what legal and sociological issues would there be if they brought you back? Would it even be allowed? Interesting, but I think technology will happen and  the court system will set limits on what can be done and can not.
 

CP wrote on May 22, 2006 1:48 PM

This raises interesting questions. To determine whether information is preserved in a brain there needs to be some technique of testing for it. I don't know what that would be but it might likely be similar to magnetic resonance or some laser like enregy that can "read" information in brains.
This could have some uses as in brains preserved in bogs; lost languages might be recovered if the information could somehow be "played" through a living person or a robotic equivalent. On the other hand, imagine unconscious or preserved persons having their memories copied and sold because people are nosey or because the people who are "dead" are famous or notorious. Some "Enquirer" type publisher might copy sex memories or even secret fantasies of famous persons. And then what if the person is reanimated...?
 

Mr. Farlops wrote on May 22, 2006 4:44 PM

There's nothing mysterious in how brain taping will work, just take an fMRI snapshot of a person's brain anatomy--at atomic resolution if necessary. Of course the engineering of this is fiendishly difficult but scientifically the problem is simple.

It's also obvious that brain taping will raise privacy and maybe even intellectual property issues. That silly movie *Brainstorms* went into some of this.
 

CP wrote on May 22, 2006 9:55 PM

No doubt it isn't mysterious, but I don't know the details of how it might work. Or in this context care.
My interest is the oddity of being unfrozen and finding people also have your memories of embarrassing incidents or fun things or holidays with your family as a kid and such.
Maybe people will buy them for their kids or people with dull lives will want your memories of hot sex.
I suppose that would be like being reincarnated and meeting other people who remembered being you, too.
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About George

Canada's leading futurist, activist and award winning blogger, George has written and spoken extensively about the impacts of cutting-edge science and technology. He is the Director of Operations for Commune Media, an advertising and marketing firm that specializes in marketing science. George has more than 10 years' experience in media, arts and communications. With relationships forged across several continents, he has managed international accounts for leading brands. In addition to his work with Commune, George is currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. He is the co-founder and president of the Toronto Transhumanist Association and has served on the Board of Directors for the World Transhumanist Association. George has been interviewed by such publications as The Guardian, the BBC, Radio Free Europe, and Beliefnet. He made an appearance on the CBC's The Hour and has been profiled in NOW and This Magazine.
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