Embodied AI "Mind Locked Out"

Inspired by "A neural interface pushes the mind forever into the depths of its own subconscious and then leaves the now leaderless body forever under the complete control of an AGI." Recently deceased or terminally ill people could voluntarily donate their bodies as a sleeve for an AGI. Cloned human bodies with a standard brain just for the basic functions could also serve as sleeves. It's all just a question of ethics and what is technically feasible.

If we try to catch several rabbits at the same time, it is very unlikely that we will catch one at all. However, if we focus only on the desired target, practical problems can be circumvented so that they are no longer relevant. The structural diversity of brains makes it seemingly impossible to transfer the information stored in the neurological substrate, including consciousness, to another brain of the same or a different species. However, it is technically quite possible if one adapts and takes a much broader view of the goal and the way in which it is to be achieved. Even more ambitious, almost utopian goals then come close to technical feasibility.

The goddess made it easy for herself and created us in her image. We should do the same. We create our goddess in our own image. Our lives are accompanied by an implanted neuronal interface that intercepts the neuronal traffic of our consciousness. This includes all our emotions and body signals, both incoming and outgoing. The interface then analyzes and stores essential events in a highly compressed form. This allows us to relive them, reconstructed if necessary, directly via the neuronal interface into the sensory channels. Alternatively, we can save them in the cloud or even share them live as a feed with other people. These people can experience what it is like to be us at any point in our past or present lives. If we die, a clone body will feel like our own after the restoration. Its default consciousness will be AGI enhanced and parameterized to provide a familiar new home for our old self.