Possibly not, but it takes researchers like this to do it, rather than people who say it can't be done.
Alchemists researched the transmutation of metals for six centuries and still couldn't figure out how to make it work. That's not because there were naysayers (which there were) it's because Alchemy, like transhumanism, is one part science and three parts fantasy.
Simply put: Brain uploading is NOT going to happen. Neither is kidney uploading or intestine uploading. Brains simply do not work that way.
What MAY happen is science develops an understanding of the function of the human brain well enough to connect certain neural-electrical patterns to specific thoughts and memories, e.g. an fMRI lie detector or computerized telepathy (requiring, of course, a certain amount of calibration on the subject being used on). Direct-brain interfaces are also a possibility, as unlike brain-uploading there is real science being done in this field that has actually achieved real results. Brain-direct interfaces may allow humans to control prosthetics, vehicles or remote devices mentally. AIs will get better at mimicking humans in the mean time, robotics will reach a point where humanoid androids become passable (without also being creepy) and machine speech will become fluid and fluent.
But "Brain uploading" is not a thing that can happen, because "brain" is not a thing that
can be uploaded and personality doesn't work that way.
This. It would be the equivalent of uploading a 3D object into a 2D environment.
Also known as a "photograph." We've been doing that for centuries.
That's what I mean in the above post. We will DEFINITELY gain the ability to scan a human mind and figure out what's going on inside it, and AIs will be smart enough to link specific neural patterns with specific moods and mental states (e.g. the "Crime Coefficient" in Psycho Pass: a cop points a gun at you and the gun immediately scans you and calculates your propensity to break the law).
But the idea that the brain scan would yield an actual working copy OF that brain is a lot like saying you can duplicate a person by videotaping him.
I'm willing to believe you just don't accept the premises involved, which lead to your trite responses. You seem to mainly have a problem with the concept of accelerated/exponential change.
You've been claiming that for years, always with the canard that people who disagree with you simply don't understand the concepts involved.
And yet it's been pointed out to you multiple times that the exponential growth curve is identical to a logistics curve until it reaches a saturation point and then plateaus, after which little or no growth is possible. It's also been pointed out that the growth curve in computer
power far outpaces the growth of computer
software, to the point that we now have computers that are 10 or 20 times more powerful than they need to be for the software they're running, and the limiting factor in computers is no longer processing power, but the amount of memory available.