ya, but no
be riding the glitch train
I have a atrong sense that the brain is very much involved in growing the rest of the nervous system......which the "parts" need to function
these hypothetical procedures will be hugely complex surgeries that will take a long, realy long time, and there will be complications, so the risk to benifit ratio will only be good in a few scenarios....for which you need a wildly complex and expensive facility to prepare for many years in advance.
gets worse, as the timing of procedures may require "parts" that are critical for the....."chasis" to self maintain, then requiring
other back up "chasis"
gets even worse, as the learning curve is going to be exceptionaly steep, and long, almost certainly
meaning that who ever trys first, wont live long enough to benifit.
all for what? a new chasis for a worn out brain?
Yes. There is a big heuristic lookup network involved.
Ever notice as we age, get hurt, that table, network, updates?
For some injuries, part of the imperfect process, is a relearn, recalibrate step involved. Once that has played out. The whole thing works as a unit.
I can sometimes remember what it used to be like. Being able to move jn some way, or some rate.
And when I try and do it today, there is a very deep inhibition. My brain / body knows it no longer happens that way,
And these things may be why physical therapy helps. No pain. No gain. We have someone else pushing us. Manipulating our bodies in ways that challenge those built in metrics.
So, it hurts, but it is good hurt. Triggers that network to reconsider, update, whatever.