As the world changes…

Will we see Cyborgs one day? 1,000 years ago some Fuqaha used to contemplate questions that seemed - at the time - distant and perhaps even absurd, such as how a person would pray while flying.

With these technological changes it makes me wonder if one day a person will be able to transport to Makkah from the US to make their prayers directly in front of the Kaabah and then beam back home upon finishing.

Will niqaabis be able to instead wear a cloaking device when they go outside? Will a person be able to “download” the entire Qur’an into their memory? How would wudu and ghusl work with robotic limbs? What about Eugenics and “Designer Babies”?

May seem silly now, but many of these questions will probably up at some point…

A young woman, confined to a wheelchair, is told to think about moving another wheelchair in front of her, first to the left and then forward.

As if by magic, the wheelchair follows her mental commands. “She was controlling the chair with her imagination,” said Timothy Surgenor, president and chief executive of Cyberkinetics Neurotechnology Systems.

Surgenor was using the video of the woman, who was paralyzed by a brain stem stroke, to demonstrate a technology called BrainGate to some 900 researchers, physicians and investors attending a meeting at the Cleveland Clinic earlier this month.

The woman had a tiny sensor that analyzes brain signals implanted on the part of her brain that controls hand movement.

A small plug protruding from just above her ear is connected to a computer that in turn has a wireless connection to the electronic wheelchair she was controlling.

“What we are doing now is just the tip of the iceberg,” Dr. Ali Rezai, director of the Brain Neuromodulation Centers at the Cleveland Clinic, said in an interview. “This concept is evolving.”

For people living with paralysis, the technology has the potential to be life-changing. Stephen Heywood was one of some 30,000 people in the United States suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, and a participant in the BrainGate trial.

“After being paralyzed for so long, it is almost impossible to describe the magical feeling of imagining a motion and having it occur,” Heywood said in an e-mail to his brother James after a session controlling a robotic arm.

Heywood, whose fight with the disease was documented in the movie “So Much So Fast,” died on November 26 after his respirator became accidentally detached Surgenor said BrainGate should be commercially available before the end of the decade.

“A lot of the technology that supports BrainGate is already out there,” he said. Cyberkinetics provides the operating system. The goal is to make the components small enough and wireless, thus eliminating the need for a plug on the scalp.

Northstar Neuroscience, another company attending the meeting at Cleveland Clinic, is testing a device that aims to help stroke victims recover from disabilities such as impairment of hand and arm movement. The therapy identifies specific areas of the brain that are trying to compensate for lost function and implants electrodes there. Electronic stimulation theoretically strengthens connections between neurons.

“It works by taking advantage of a naturally-occurring phenomenon called neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to reorganize in response to an injury,” Northstar Chief Executive Alan Levy said. When part of the brain dies because of a stroke, another part of the brain attempts to take over that function.

The trouble is, in most cases the process doesn’t go far enough and relatively little function is recovered, he said. “What Northstar has discovered is that if you stimulate the neurons in the new neuroplastic area, you can dramatically enhance the neuroplasticity and enhance function,” he said.

For several years, doctors have been implanting brain pacemakers into patients with Parkinson’s disease or other disorders that cause severe tremors. The stop-watch size device, made by Medtronic Inc., is implanted in the chest and connected to leads threaded into the brain.

Known as deep brain stimulation, it delivers electrical pulses to targeted areas in the brain to interrupt the signals that cause tremor. Medtronic is testing to see if it might also help cases of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), depression and obesity.

Cleveland Clinic’s Rezai said using electricity to stimulate various parts of the nervous system or organs may soon help people who suffer such varied afflictions as OCD, migraine headaches, sleep apnea, incontinence, obesity, impotence, hypertension and even heart failure.

“There will be a lot of diseases that we can’t help today that we will be able to help.”

10 Responses to “As the world changes…”

  1. Researchers in Swden reported recently that they teleported a very small amunt of matter about 20 inches. It is only the beginning. In a thousand years, God knows what the world will be like. I am looking forward to the Holosuite :)

    Ya Haqq!

  2. This is pretty amazing. It reminds me of a comic book character called Daredevil:
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=DpBm4KoWsrY

  3. You mentioned beaming into Makkah to pray.
    In Medieval works of fiqh scholars mention the issue of “Ahl al-KhuTwah” or the people of one step, i.e. he can take one step and be in front of the Kab’ah when their foot lands with that step. Can he shorten his prayers when he reaches his destination?
    or b/c there is no difficulty in his travel he has to pray them fully?
    Most said he can shorten them, b/c the causative reasoning is the fact that he is travelling, not that there is difficulty in the act.

    Also a person who is kidnapped by the Jinn and is stuck on its back held up in the sky, can he pray when the time comes in? does facing the Qiblah at that height count?

    These issues and those like them are called edge issues, in that they push the limit on trying to determine what constitutes a legal action or not, not that they actually happened and were asked about (at least i hope the jinn one did’nt! :) )

  4. Subhanullah Amir, that video was amazing

  5. Here’s a question: Will Gulf Arabs be able to take their androids as sex slaves?

  6. lol @ Umar…

  7. Tariq, concerning beaming into Makka:
    1. Imagine the crowding issues, but
    2. Instead of paying for hotels, a person can do Hajj during the day, beam home for the night and beam back for the next fajr!

  8. Oh, and I wonder how years ago, decades, centuries ago it took months to get to Makka so it was the most valuable thing to a person when they did it. People used to marvel at others who made it there and back. But, when one beams in and out, would we become so used to it that it would no longer feel special to us?? “Do anything special today, dear?”, “Aw, nothing really. Ate lunch in a real Indian restaurant in Delhi, looked at some new orchid species in Singapore and did Zuhr at the usual place in Makka…nothing special really.”

  9. Man, I just can’t stop: “Hey, I’m doing Umrah this year!” “So what. I do Umrah everyday now that I’ve got the Beamer 3000 ultra teleporter!”

  10. David Blaine has been doing stuff like this for a while…

Leave a Reply