Evangelion Episode 24 Download Raw Data

Evangelion Episode 24 Download Raw Data

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— Cave Johnson, is hard. Why reinvent the wheel, when you've got plenty of humans walking around? Who will miss one, right? Alternatively, you might be one of those humans easy. Either way, once you finish scanning the brain, you end up with a file that you run in a physics simulator, and presto, you have a computer that remembers being a human. If you do it carefully enough, the original brain won't even notice it happening. This computer over a.

The simulation can be run many thousands of times faster than objective speed, if you've got enough computing power. It can be backed up with trivial ease. You can run multiple copies at the same time, and have them do different things, make exotic, and tinker around with the inner workings of the brain in ways that are either difficult or impossible to do with a meat brain. Additionally, there's the fact that it's impossible to kill as long as its data is backed up somewhere and there exists a computer on which to run it - you can just restart the simulation wherever you left off and the mind won't even recognize it. Critics of the concept are quick to point out that it presupposes an understanding of neurology (not just human neurology, but even the neurology of a common insect) far, far beyond what currently exists; and that without that knowledge, even the most powerful computer cannot do this. Proponents of the idea assure us that this knowledge is coming. Proponents who hope to live to see and actually benefit from it assure us that it's coming really really soon.

As with, the idea of brain uploading has inevitably taken on a quasi-religious aspect for many in recent years, since it does promise immortality of a sort (as long as your backups and the hardware to run them on are safe), and even transcendence of the body. The advantages bestowed by brain uploading are a bit overwhelming if you're trying to incorporate them into a story. It kind of kills the tension when the protagonist can restore from backup whenever the kills them.

Authors have devised a number of cop-outs, which you can recognize by asking these questions: • What is the underlying mechanism of the upload? Is the computer simulating every atom in every neuron, or is the upload applying memories and personality characteristics to a default template? • Is uploading destructive?

Depending on which process you use, it may be possible to do it nondestructively, but many authors deem it convenient to have it destroy the original, to avoid the confusion of having running around. Note The easiest, and currently the only vaguely practical process would be to take the brain down to liquid nitrogen temps, then image it with a scanning probe microscope. Except that a SPM has to get the probe within nanometers of the surface it's scanning, so after you scan a layer of brain, you scrape it off with a diamond microtome and scan the next layer down. You end up with a map of the locations of each atom in the brain, and a pile of rapidly defrosting brain slices on the operating room floor. This is also the most destructive brain uploading process imaginable that doesn't. • Can you augment intelligence?

Or does the brain's pattern need to be copied exactly to still function like a mind, leaving no room for radical enhancements? • Can the upload be copied? If the answer is 'no', the work might be on the soft end of, although it's also possible to make it a little harder by running the AIs on a quantum computer and saying something about the '. Or simply declare the recording to be There's also a pile of legal, moral, and theological questions that might be addressed in the story: • Is the AI considered to be the same person as its human predecessor or a digital twin? If an upload is a person, how different do copies of that upload have to be before they're separate persons?

• Is one copy responsible for the debts and/or crimes incurred or committed by another copy? Is the original responsible, assuming nondestructive uploading? • Assuming nondestructive, undetectable uploading, is uploading without consent of the original a crime?

What if the original objects, but the upload doesn't want to be deleted? What about uploading dead people who specified they didn't want to be uploaded after death? • Assuming destructive uploading, the original is dead. How does the copy feel about that? • What do you do with the backups of an upload who kills themselves? • Would the soul be copied over?

Is there a soul at all to be copied? While some people might see the debunking of mind-body separation as just another case of, a great deal of people would find the idea that even their mind is quantifiable to be rather frightening. Or worse, would see those who go through with the upload as, and campaign for a for it violating human dignity or some other such reason. • Assuming the existence of the soul (or even just assuming the original believes he has one), how does he feel about the prospect that he may not be simply destroyed, but go on to an afterlife (pleasant or unpleasant) while a newly created double takes his place? After all, 'he' stands a 50/50 chance of winding up as the original or the copy. For that matter, is the newborn copy innocent of sin despite his memories of committing them? • Even theorists who don't believe in the soul, per se, often believe in consciousness as a real phenomenon.

Would a simulation of a brain experience consciousness any more than a simulation of lungs can be said to actually respirate oxygen? How could an outside observer tell?

Note Granted that you can't really be sure even that the people around you are conscious like you are; but the fact that they're made of the same stuff as you and function the same way you do provides a pretty strong hint that they are. The fact that the observer probably can't tell arguably makes this consideration more important, not less—since uploadees would be gambling their very selves on the trustworthiness of this tech. • Though fictional depictions of rarely address the fact, programs move by copying themselves.

Any time 'virtual you' moves from Server A to Server B, you're leaving behind a duplicate of yourself, unless it's • If a scanned mind is an analog recording, the constant and casual re-copying necessary to 'travel' electronically would be impossible without You could copy yourself into a durable and long-lasting robot body relatively safely, but you could never safely leave it except by physically transplanting the robot's brain. And of course, physical electronic components do wear out. • How accurate would the copy be, especially in the early days of the technology? If the flaws are significant but not immediately obvious, how many people might undergo the procedure before the problems are noticed? And if you know about the flaws ahead of time, how much of your personality or consciousness are you willing to throw away or see changed beyond your control for a type of immortality? • Even if the tech is usually reliable, do have any legal rights as people? • If you have concerns about the trustworthiness of the process, Conversely, if you're a true believer in the process, what if society condemns it?

• Can the computer provide a good enough simulation of human sensory input to keep you from going mad? Even a brief period spent in a sensory deprivation tank can have terrible effects on the mind, so one can imagine what complete absence of a physical body might do. • Who owns the computer or computers that your virtual self would be running on? Are they under any obligation to keep running your program?

If your program is not being run, is that the same as being dead? In suspended animation? • A man converted into software has all the vulnerabilities of software. He can very likely be hacked, duplicated, or edited against his will. For better or for worse, the human mind is currently relatively impregnable. Do you really want to be rendered no more unique than a google search image, and more malleable than putty in the hands of others? Do you want to wake up one day to find that you're an illegal copy of yourself, being treated as a toy by a hacker?

Would you necessarily own the copyright to yourself? If such a copyright even existed at all would the agency that uploaded you own it?

How can the law provide any protection to a citizen who can be duplicated (and his duplicate as easily as copying a computer file? Autoturn Pro 3d Torrent. And every time such a copy is produced, 'you' stand a 50/50 chance of being that unlucky tortured twin. If a virtual world makes a synthetic heaven possible, it likewise makes possible, and the latter may be far easier to produce (either accidentally or deliberately). • In a world where uniqueness exists, at best, as a legal courtesy, mightn't human life come to be seen as fundamentally less valuable?

What rights can a completely replaceable person have? Widespread tends to lead to or something very much like it.

Or it may be a result of said Singularity. Compare with the, where the uploaded brain can control a projection of themselves to interact with the real world. Contrast, where computer files are uploaded to the brain instead of the other way around, though both tropes are occasionally used together. See also,, and. Compare,, and. Article from contains a list of examples. • Done in: Tenshi no Bokura, to the main character's best friend.

To avoid spoilers, lets just say that it. Reader included.

• A variation on this is Yuzuki from, who was created to be a for Kokubunji's dead sister. He can't upload her mind directly, so he just programs as much information about his sister as he can, and for much of the series she attempts to emulate her. Then, after an accident wipes out all that data, Kokobunji declines to replace it, saying she should just. • and its sequels like this one. • Skull Heart has an interesting example: the Jupiter Empire somehow got ahold of the original Gundam's battle computer, which had stored in it Amuro Ray's complete battle data from the One Year War.

They used this to create a partial AI and uploaded it into a new Gundam. Which went berserk and attacked everything in sight because someone didn't set the targeting parameters correctly. Although it's destroyed, it's briefly hinted, right as the machine 'dies', that a true piece of Amuro's mind might have been present in the data. • does something similar in the original Crossbone Gundam story: As a very old, very decrepit man, he makes extensive use of robot stand-ins and ends up developing the original bio-brain system. At the end of the story, he has eight walking WMDs called the Divinidad, all but one piloted by bio-copies; when the final battle starts going poorly, the real one tries to get to Earth so he can personally destroy it while the seven duplicates hold off and the Crossbone Vanguard.

• Steel Seven has Callisto's Shadow transferring his consciousness into a bio-brain after his death on Earth, using his telepathic brother's mind as a go-between. This bio-brain is then loaded into the Digitus so that he can fight alongside his still-living twin in the final battle. Notably, Callisto considers this (or at least abandoning his weak, fleshly body) rather than the most others would. • In one Phantom of Baker Street, the coded an artificial intelligence that is practically himself, and then killed himself. This artificial intelligence then haunted an event and. Nobody in the movie • has a couple of instances of a gigantic supercomputer being used to simulate the brain of a deceased human. Whether the series' main antagonists, the 'Machine-Humans', also qualify or are simply disembodied human brains inhabiting robotic shells is not made clear.

• resorts to this when they need to build new robots but don't have the time to build the AI from scratch; it's mentioned that the for KyoRyu and EnRyu took six months to develop. This results in the ridiculously Goldymarg and the child-like Mic Sounders.

• Mic Sounders Boom Robo was uploaded from Stallion White; this is why Mic was able to System Change to protect Stallion's sister Swan before his limiters were removed. No one's sure where the Cosmo Robo personality actually came from; maybe that's that that's what a young Super-AI actually acts like. • Pei La Cain and Palus Abel, two of the villains from FINAL, are supposedly based on the actual masters of the Green and Red Planets. Given that three of GGG's units are children, biologically or metaphorically, of Cain or Abel, including, this results in brief angst..

•, when not focusing on sociology, likes to take a trip down this lane. Memories can be copied easily and reliably, but an individual's 'ghost', the verse's term for consciousness, can not be safely or easily altered or copied. Expensive and rare techniques called 'ghost-dubbing' actually upload this consciousness into an electronic format, but the result is always more limited or more insane than the biological version, and the biological suffers heavy brain damage and eventually death as a result, which is why ghost dubbing is highly illegal in the GITS universe, punishable by life in prison or brain-wipe. It's not really clear that the resulting electronic copies are the same mind, or just a.

The resulting copy can be copied many times, but will degenerate each time it is copied. It also asks the question of what makes up a mind, the soul or the memories, when a boy receives all of his father's memories with interesting effects. Whether true mind-uploading is possible within the universe is still up at arms, as most of the attempts either don't try hard enough or don't involve humans in the first place.

• The second feature film, Innocence, features a multitude of ghost-dubbed dolls manipulated for the purpose of freeing the enslaved children used to dub them. It raises the question of whether, being imparted with some aspect of human consciousness, the dubbed dolls cannot be considered alive, and thus victims themselves in the film's violent plot. • Interestingly, has a South American guerilla hero/Che Guevera undergo into clone bodies as a way to 'miraculously survive' multiple assassination attempts. Both the Major and Batou considered this considerably dangerous and 'macho'. The dictator himself died after three ghost-dubs (still, as the Major notes, surviving just one was ) but his dub was then copied into multiple clones. • In one of the Stand Alone Complex episodes this golden rule gets oddly broken, when a disappointed indie movie director makes a perfect movie inside his, which caused people who connected themselves to it to lose themselves in the movie and become comatose in reality.

Just how this could be possible when a brain should only be able to host one Ghost, and it's impossible for a Ghost to leave its original 'data-storage' without highly specialized equipment as described above, is never explained. It's more likely that they're not entering that brain, rather just viewing particular data and encountering something not unlike the Individual Eleven meme. •: • Innovators have the ability to transfer their consciousness to Veda after their deaths Used primarily by Ribbons and Tieria Erde to cheat death. • More than that, Innovades are essentially - 'Bio-Terminals' - stored within Veda, of varying levels of complexity. An Innovade is dumped into a cloned host body, capable of interfacing with Veda and other Innovades, as a type of artificial Innovator, though they seem incapable of interfacing with actual humans like true Innovators can.

In the clearest example, artificial Gundam Meister #874, Hanayo, starts off as being depicted as a hologram, then shifts into a nanomachine body, then is forced into a Haro. • This technique is used to amass Ribbon's clone army for the last battle of the series. • In, Lowe gains possession of a strange module from a, the so-called 'First Coordinator'. This black box just happens to contain Glenn's, and eventually Lowe's teammate Professor hooks it up to a holographic projector, allowing George to captain the Junk Guild's battleship.

• In ( Battle Angel Alita) this is used as important final plot twist in the last episodes, when the mad doctor Desty Nova reveals that his organic brain was abducted and replaced with a biochip with his personal memories implanted. He found it years ago and became literally mad. In Last Order this practice appears to be diffused in some contexts (i.e. Zekka had practised it on himself but also the main character 'herself' becomes an unknowning example of this case; new revelations are follwed by ' ' stuff).

However, the sequel is stuffed with many other examples of futuristical or bizarre. We have also the of Desty Nova. • explores the idea of digitizing one's memories/souls to achieve immortality and looks at the potential side effects of such technology such as the increasing gap between the rich and poor, the casual way people might just delete the memory chips of their loved ones to make more space for other people, and how quickly people can throw away their bodies to swap for new ones.

Shiba from who, before his death, transfer his consciousness and memory inside of a computer. • 's EVA units and the MAGI supercomputer are borderline examples. More like ' tho'. • The Dummy System is like this and treated as a, essentially a simulated pilot that's used when Shinji refuses to kill Touji. How bad is it?

Well has to take a look in since she is the model for is and even she is disturbed by it. • In, one of the first things super-hacker Zeus does as part of his is download his mind into a new Medusa form. 'That shell could never contain my potential.'

• In, Melina's memories were uploaded into a device her father constructed and disguised as a musical instrument, so he could find a body that matches hers and create a. Once he actually did it, Melina. • In the British comic (a stablemate to ), three of the protagonist's squadmates were uploaded to chips on their death and integrated into his equipment.

(These personality-saving 'biochips' are actually an integral feature of all Genetic Infantrymen; they're meant to be recovered in case of death and installed in newly-cloned bodies.) Of course, the chip has to be recovered and placed into a slot in the G.I.' S equipment within sixty seconds. • has them as well, though they're huge when they're introduced. One strip in has disposable variants as a plot point. • In: • 's personality is based on an upload of Wonder Man's personality — though in practice, the two of them have Not that this prevents him from •, psycho and Avengers enemy, attempts to upload the entire mind of his 'mother', the Wasp, into a female bot that he's created (aptly named Jocasta) for companionship, having brainwashed his 'father'/her husband into helping him do it. While the Avengers rescue her before the process could finish (and kill her), Jocasta ends up with enough of Janet's personality to later turn on him and join the Avengers. • Ultron himself is as having originated with a botched download by mentally-unstable Henry Pym's all-too-flawed engrams.

• In the Marvel/Epic comic, one of the themes is that the main heroes fight against a tyrannical government, only to find out. Willow, one of the main characters, uploads herself to take over the new government's main computer. • In the original series, this accidentally occurs to Professor Honeycutt; while testing out his Menta-wave helmet (which granted its user psychic and telekinetic abilities) a bolt of lightning caused his consciousness to be transferred to the body of his robot SAL. In the, this later on allows him to copy his consciousness between computers, allowing him to. • In, people can destructively vacate their bodies, using their chemical energy to bootstrap a cloud of that then houses their consciousness. This being Transmet, they've formed their own weird subculture. • Adam Warren's version of the has this as a common technology, which plays a role in several of the plots — such as when a rogue agent uses an emergency backup of Yuri's mind and DNA to grow his own to send at the originals.

•: • Tony Stark being the tech geek he is, he couldn't resist the temptation to make a back-up of his brain on a portable hard drive. Came in handy after he ended up wiping his mind at the end of the Worlds Most Wanted arc. • The stand-alone comic book is entirely about Tony Stark 2.0, a digital version of himself that occupies his suit.

As the comic progresses, he slowly gets corrupted by a rogue virus girl program. The virus turns out to be an amalgam of the various test subjects for the brain uploading research that went into Tony Stark 2.0's creation. Note that Tony Stark didn't perform any of the unethical and torturous research, he merely stole it from the, Corrupt Corporations and Government Conspiracies that did. • The of had this trope when Lyonard uploaded his brain as a side result of him exploring a virtual world. Then this trope became a when after Lyonard got (or, more precisely, got and then got killed off). • This happened to Cliff Steele (Robotman) in 's after the Candlemaker crushed his brain. Fortunately, he was hooked up to the Chief's computer at the time, and his intelligence was downloaded on a disk.

Once he figured out what happened, he was able to return to his body, though he was pretty freaked out by the entire process. • The Battlestar Galactica comic The Final Five has this as the origin of the Thirteenth Tribe. Originally, they were members of the other 12 tribes but after uploading their consciousnesses into new cybernetic bodies were treated as a new group. This includes the idea that the Thirteenth Tribe have committed some kind of 'sin', apparently borne out by the intervention of supernatural/sufficiently advanced beings. • featured a number of characters with who had previously downloaded their brainwaves into the suit, allowing them to continue fighting long after death. • in has destructive brain scanning technology.

A laser is used to (destructively) read a person's brain. • In the comic reboot of The Jetsons, Rosie the maid is actually the Jetson's grandmother, who uploaded her mind and memories into a robotic body when her body started failing.

• In the Portal fanfic, it's revealed that Wheatley used to be a human, too. The memories of the uploading could definitely be considered, since at the same time the Aperture scientists ripped out their victim’s memories. They kept the body, though, and the story avoids the “cloning” question by downloading Wheatley’s memories back into his original body.

• The main plot of the fanfic involves humans uploading to the virtual world of Equestria, which is presented as a utopia compared to Earth. •: • Discussed and subverted in chapter 28 - Shepard's Soul Catcher has everything that should be needed to reconstruct her, and yet doesn't actually have her. He took out the hexagonal chip from his coat, the Soul Catcher that contained Shepard's memories, her mind, her skills.

But ironically, not her soul. • In chapter 35 we learn that part of the process of making Snatchers involves making a copy of a person's memories. • Merlin does a variant in when Excalibur malfunctions, by transferring Kilgharrah to the plane to make it fly without the use of both its engines. • Commonplace in, which draws a lot of technology from. Humans were the first to develop cortical stacks, which save a ocnstantly-updated brain-state, although this was due to reverse-engineering technology. The turians developed their own rough approximation in the form of Exos, although it wasn't until they met humanity that they could directly upload a brain into an Exo body. •: The planet is revealed to have a nervous system which the Na'vi have evolved the ability to interface with, allowing them to 'upload and download' memories, which they believe to be a spiritual connection with nature and the afterlife.

The Na'vi are even able to transfer a mind between bodies, though it is clearly not something to attempt frivolously since they link the whole tribe at once for the ritual at a 'nerve center' they consider sacred. • In, Alfred uploads his 'brain algorithms' into the batcomputer to give the new sidekick a briefing. • features a way of making copies of a person mind that can be uploaded into clone bodies. Unfortunately as uploading is often done after death you get memories of dying. After V'Ger scans and destroys Ilia, it sends a robot replica of her to the Enterprise with her memories and personality stored in it. Eventually the crew manages to re-awaken her mind in the machine.

• Similarly, in, Data tries to help B4 become 'more than his programming,' and uploads his experiences and memories into B4's much simpler brain. Later, when Captain Picard tells B4 of Data's death, B4 is understandably confused but later starts absentmindedly singing a song that Data did.

When he gets stuck on a stanza, Picard prompts him with the next line, wondering if possibly Data is actually somewhere in B4. • In Will is uploaded into a computer in an attempt to save his life after being shot. Evelyn gets uploaded in the climax just before the virus destroys Will, allowing her to see the truth of Will's actions. • has Galvatron, who is really Megatron in a new body, having uploaded his essence into a human-made body.

• In, Chappie uploads Deon's consciousness into a Scout whilst the latter is dying from a gunshot wound, and then later uploads Yolandi's consciousness into another custom-built Scout after she'd died. Chappie also gets around the problem of his low battery by uploading himself into a discarded Scout body nearby. • called it a 'dopple' (as in doppelganger). Once your brain was uploaded to a you could take a vacation and experience life as an animal. Aaron Fingle's dopple was botched when the technicians lost his body and were forced to upload his consciousness to a mainframe as an interim solution. The film indicated he had a limited amount of time before his consciousness degraded to the point of non-functionality. It wasn't really made clear if this was a function of the transfer, the inability of his body to continue function without the mind or some other factor, but then again it was a made for TV movie aired on PBS.

It was also lampooned on. •: • Jarvis in the movie.

• Arnim Zola, the scientist from, succumbed to disease in the 1970s, forcing him to upload his mind to a computer system but in his case it only helped him as he is able to aid the modern HYDRA, which he revived as a shadow organization within the US government, execute their plan without the restrictions of age slowing him down in. Also, since this happened back when computers were still reel to reel, his brain requires a truly massive amount of storage space, in both the literal sense and the technological sense. • An odd case in. Rather than a human attempting to upload their mind from a body into a computer, it's Ultron, a computer program, attempting to upload his mind from the network into a specially-designed body. Later, Tony and Bruce try to upload J.A.R.V.I.S. Into the same body, despite opposition from Steve, Wanda and Pietro.

• The cheesy sci-fi film suggests that part of the protagonist's mind was uploaded to the killer robot. • Deconstructed in the film. Gwen, the protagonist, loses her job as a corporate spokesperson due to age and racial discrimination, just as the company that's firing her is perfecting Brain Uploading technology. In order to support her daughter, she asks to be put into a younger body and return to her job as the company's spokesperson. The technology is still in its infancy. When the newer, younger Gwen feels disconnected and distant from her daughter, she finds out that she wasn't 'uploaded' so much as 'photocopied.'

Fragments of Gwen's memories and experiences were put into a new host body and blended with the host's personality; in short the original Gwen is dead, and the new spokesperson is an entirely new being. • by has uploads; they're legally the same person as their predecessor—to prevent people from running up huge debts, copying themselves, and then committing suicide—and work by neural simulation. • The universe has both neural ('alpha-level') and behavioral ('beta-level') uploads. • Alpha-level uploads are considered sentient in their own right, and when they're first developed constructing them kills the human in question. Even after nondestructive scans become possible, destructive alpha-level scans achieve a higher resolution and a more accurate simulation of the mind they are based upon. Most people prefer nondestructive uploads with periodic updates, for obvious reasons.

It's also implied that it takes a certain strength of will and personality to become an upload. Many of the first group of uploadees who undergo destructive scanning do not thrive in their new virtualities and many crash or became corrupted. Later systems presumably had this bug ironed out, though it is never explicitly mentioned. • Beta-level simulations are generally not considered sentient, although a particularly good beta-level simulation that was trained over a very long period of time may well appear sentient if you don't know any better, to the point where it may as well be considered an AI. • In William Gibson's series: • Neuromancer itself has a ROM chip with a human being's personality stored on it. When plugged in, it acts like an AI. • Later, more complete uploads can be made with the advent of more complex storage and simulation systems.

3Jane's Aleph in Mona Lisa Overdrive ended up running several human minds after their bodies died, and it was suggested it may have been used to record many more. • Played for extreme horror in the short story 'Daddy's World'.

• In Oreg had a variant of this done to him. His father gave him a bowl of soup that made him fall asleep, and when Oreg woke up, he was.

The year is 2015, and half of the Earth’s population is dead, victims of the disaster called Second Impact! Answering a summons from his enigmatic father, 14-year old Shinji Ikari arrives in the re-built city of Tokyo 3 just as a gigantic creature identified as an “Angel” attacks!

Forced into the cockpit of a giant bio-mechanical construct known as an Evangelion, Shinji must defend the city from the rampaging Angel or die trying. Then Shinji Ikari finds himself faced with competition. Not only is Rei’s Eva back on the line, there’s also a new giant robot defender that’s being promoted by a group outside NERV! And to top it off, prepare to meet the third Eva pilot, who has got Shinji in her cross-hairs.