Hey guys, I'm wondering if anyone has ever considered sending Cyborgs to Mars? In all of Elon Musk's talks and other Mars talks, I'm never heard mention of people with metal limbs.
My reasoning is that people with fewer limbs should need less food for sustenance, no? So instead of food, you need batteries?
What are the challenges associated with making a volunteer into as much of a cyborg as medically and technologically possible, and then sending that guy to Mars.
Also, how about funding this volunteer by making a reality show?
Note: I can volunteer, if needed.
>>8550317
OP, do we have cyborgs on earth?
Only cyborgs due to necessity. Not yet cyborgs due to cosmetics.
>>8550317
Wouldn't energy be more useful for humans than calories?
Sorry, I'm a noob. When I hit the arrow to reply to your reply, I only get options "Repost" and "Hd Post".
Not sure how to reply locally.
@21:51:41
Yes, that's my thought precicely. It would be cheaper to supply someone who requires more electricity and less food.
But I think the problem is in the cost of maintaining the bionic parts.
>>8550356
Why is it costly to maintain bionic parts?
If you lose an arm you don't die.
Same goes for almost everything humans have.