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Why don’t humans back up their minds when they enter the Matrix?


As Morpheus told us in The Matrix, as soon as you die in the Matrix you die in real life.


But once your mind is only a huge load of bits and bytes (otherwise it would be impossible to be transported via wires), why don't they simply make a backup of their minds as soon as they enter the Matrix, and if something dangerous happens to them (like death), the backup will be reimported. Thus their last memories (everything which happened after the last backup) will be lost, but they can not be killed in the Matrix.


Would this be possible?




Answer



"But after your mind is only a huge load of bits and bytes (otherwise it would be impossible to be transported via wires)"


From seeing the movies, I would say that it is the opposite; they keep using the hardware for their minds (their brain), it is only that the info about their senses is provided by the Matrix and not their sensory organs.


The opposite would require a means to "imprinting" in their brain the memories about what they did in the Matrix, so that they could remember them when they unplug from it. Nothing in the movies suggest this technology.


And of course, if the Matrix would have been working as you mentioned, people in the Matrix would have never used their brain (at least for superior functions) until they were unplugged.


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