The primary challenge in developing cyborgs stems from the need to simulate the human body's physiology, behavior & emotions into mathematical formulas.

The premise is that a mathematical simulation can express every biochemical or biophysical magnetic-electric process. In Arnold Schwarzenegger's films, the Terminator is a "human cyborg." Creating such a cyborg requires deciphering many complex mental processes.
The premise is that our memories, physiology, emotions, and behavior is consequential and can be mathematically simulated.
The branch of biomathematics is in its infancy. Still, without a mathematical translation of all human activities, producing an intelligent cyborg that functions as a human being would be challenging.
- Three forces drive human physiology: Biochemical, electrical, and mental-energetic processes.
- The laws of chemistry and physics are well known; everyone has a mathematical expression. But the psychic-energetic dimension does not have an exact mathematical measurement because it is unclear how it works. (Substantial obstacle)
The biggest obstacle is the mathematical cracking of the processes in the human brain. Although not romantic, concepts like beauty and love, positive and negative emotions, and memories can have mathematical expressions.
- Despite much brain research development, most processes have not yet been mapped. Cyborgs will have to apply complex mathematical laws to be "human." Otherwise, they will be "robots."
Precise simulation of all human body physiology, behavior, and emotions can open new unbelievable horizons!
- The number of processes in the human body is finite, which changes from time to time but will allow for a complete computer simulation. Quite similar to what you see in science fiction movies.
- If we fully control the simulation of all physiological-emotional processes, it will be possible to cure any disease and even prevent aging!
The possibility of living in a computer simulation has appeared in several well-known films such as The Matrix and Jumanji.
- This is where the story begins to become much more exciting and complicated. If we have reached a perfect simulation of the human body, there is a more plausible possibility that we, too, live in a complete simulation. Still, even well-known physicists do not rule out this possibility. It is precisely the possibility that we live in a simulation that solves many of the mysteries of modern physics!
Continue reading: Deterministic human simulation—Pinnacle of scientific achievements.