Interesting point about public record and private thoughts and feelings not being revealed. They might be essential, or inconsequential, or somewhere in between. Human mind might be like a hologram, where you can break off chunks and lose some fidelity of the image, but the whole of it will still be there, potentially restorable once you let the resurrected brain fill the gaps as long as the remaining resolution is not too low.
Personally, I do not think that there is a universal criteria of the success of “Reconstructive Psychosurgery”, and it is up to each person to decide what traits and features are essential to preserve post-op. Some people would require a near-perfect preservation, others, like myself, would settle for the basic outline.
Interesting point about public record and private thoughts and feelings not being revealed. They might be essential, or inconsequential, or somewhere in between. Human mind might be like a hologram, where you can break off chunks and lose some fidelity of the image, but the whole of it will still be there, potentially restorable once you let the resurrected brain fill the gaps as long as the remaining resolution is not too low.
Personally, I do not think that there is a universal criteria of the success of “Reconstructive Psychosurgery”, and it is up to each person to decide what traits and features are essential to preserve post-op. Some people would require a near-perfect preservation, others, like myself, would settle for the basic outline.