Medical technology verges on incorporating directly into our anatomy processors with the computational power of the famous Watson IBM computer and Internet-like communications. As the size of computers spiral downward, their wholesale use (as well as RFID-type technology) will extend lifetimes, enhance our intellect, and assist in controlling technology outside the body via digital I/O and thought. This includes the eventual merging of synthetic DNA and artificial intelligence that together will bring new diagnostics, medical treatment and smart nano-prosthetics well within the horizon of the next generation. A prosthetic genome hastens the day when enhanced life forms, such as human organs, can be made entirely from a fusion of living organisms and non-living materials. Widespread diffusion of this technology into populations risk creating a world of “haves” that can afford and “have nots,” that cannot afford enhanced intellect and longevity. Without changes to current U.S. patent law, commercial interests might jeopardize our well-being through patent monopolies, market forces might squeeze out efficiencies at the expense of performance and reliability, and wrongdoers might dare to unleash digital viruses into a world filled with anatomically installed biomedical devices receptive to Internet-style communications. Overtime artificially altered and controlled metabolisms may begin to alter the progression of natural biological evolution and force an examination about what the notion of “human” means in the age of human cyborgs.
[1]
Daniel R. Frisch,et al.
Trends in permanent pacemaker implantation in the United States from 1993 to 2009: increasing complexity of patients and procedures.
,
2012,
Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[2]
S. J. Redmond,et al.
Sensors-Based Wearable Systems for Monitoring of Human Movement and Falls
,
2012,
IEEE Sensors Journal.
[3]
S. Krimsky.
From Asilomar to industrial biotechnology: Risks, reductionism and regulation
,
2005,
Science as culture.
[4]
H. E. Kubitschek,et al.
Cell volume increase in Escherichia coli after shifts to richer media
,
1990,
Journal of bacteriology.
[5]
Nigel H. Lovell,et al.
Biological–Machine Systems Integration: Engineering the Neural Interface
,
2010,
Proceedings of the IEEE.
[6]
Kevin Fu,et al.
Pacemakers and Implantable Cardiac Defibrillators: Software Radio Attacks and Zero-Power Defenses
,
2008,
2008 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (sp 2008).
[7]
Michio Kaku,et al.
Physics of the Future
,
2011
.