Originally Posted by Manaburner
Being a physician I'm interested in this thread but I can't help but to question the feasibility of a "brain transplant".
Something as simple to all of us such as vision is so complex an action that reproducing the connections from the occipital lobe (vision centers) to the optic nerve/globe would be so odious that it would most probably be unfeasible.
As an example, trying to pinpoint seizure centers in a human brain by probe (there are intracranial stimulators that target seizure foci and silence them with low level current) requires weeks to months of trial and error using biofeedback or just plain "guessing" as where they are. The same technology is used in Parkinson's Disease patients and requires complex programming and incredible patience on the operator's part and the PATIENT's part as well.
And this is for a single focus in the brain.
Now imagine how many connections there are for human vision. To map out a millimeter of the retina to it's origins in the occipital lobe, yank out the connections (axonal trauma would probably kill neurons altogether) and place them in another body, preserving the exact mapping of that visual center.... you get the idea.
Technology is unlimited, yes. But humans themselves have their limitations. The brain, for how wonderful it is... is severely limited in it's organic form.