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360 points danielmorozoff | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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picafrost ◴[] No.45030080[source]
I think anyone who chooses to undergo the first few trials of a new operation like this, and is informed about the risks, is very brave. I do not know much of anything about medical science, but my impression is that we are still very, very far from having a deep grasp of how both the brain and the immune system work. Ultimately, to the body an implant is simply a foreign object.

Many tech professionals work on projects that effect people's lives in very serious ways. But a lot of folk seem to feel a bit of meaninglessness in this career and the threshold of making a mistake isn't very high. If it's an off day, sloppy work yesterday can be fixed with another PR.

Building something that is meant to attach to someone's brain would be quite the burden to carry.

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ignoramous ◴[] No.45032791[source]
> Ultimately, to the body an implant is simply a foreign object.

I get your point but, there's a lot of foreign objects going in by the way of various pores and openings. Biological beings are surprisingly resilient & fragile at the same time.

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1. znpy ◴[] No.45039547[source]
I think you narfed your own point by using objects getting into various pores and openings.

Pacemakers are somewhat similar devices that get implanted into bodies and still effectively are "foreign objects".