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Are we worrying too much?


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#1 ken_nj

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Posted 17 August 2007 - 04:24 AM


1. Most of us here probaly wont need to fall back on cryonics for another 20-30 or more years. Even more advanced suspension procedures will be in use than we have today.

2. Theres practically no limit to how long we can stay frozen until the technology allows the repair of the body. Eventually, how will we not develop the technology? How could we never eventually completely understand the human body? Doing all kinds of things and repairs to the body will surely by child's play by unimaginable futuristic technologies.

#2 Live Forever

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Posted 17 August 2007 - 04:31 AM

What are people worrying too much about, do you think? If you are asking whether we are worrying too much about whether aging will be cured, then I think it is something we should very much be worried about.

Cryonics is a good fall back option and I am not going to knock it, but I'd just as soon not have to use it if I didn't have to. :))

That being said, when/if most of us are preserved, a few decades down the road, you are right and I am sure the preservation methods will be greatly improved.

#3 Reno

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Posted 17 August 2007 - 06:30 AM

I would fear being frozen. I've heard too many stories about California brown outs and generator failures to believe any freezer would be secure enough to store my body.

#4 Luna

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Posted 17 August 2007 - 07:52 AM

We are worrying about d-y-i-n-g.
So we can easily guess something bad will happen, something won't happen right, something will fail, something will go really bad..
so on.

I can be sure that even in a world we cannot die, some of will still worry.. it's hard not to.

#5 sjvan

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Posted 19 August 2007 - 09:45 PM

I would fear being frozen. I've heard too many stories about California brown outs and generator failures to believe any freezer would be secure enough to store my body.


From the Alcor FAQ:

Alcor uses liquid nitrogen to keep cryonics patients cold, and the laws of physics keep liquid nitrogen cold, not electricity. Liquid nitrogen refills are needed every few weeks, but electricity is not required for current patient care systems.

#6 Live Forever

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Posted 19 August 2007 - 10:39 PM

I would fear being frozen. I've heard too many stories about California brown outs and generator failures to believe any freezer would be secure enough to store my body.


From the Alcor FAQ:

Alcor uses liquid nitrogen to keep cryonics patients cold, and the laws of physics keep liquid nitrogen cold, not electricity. Liquid nitrogen refills are needed every few weeks, but electricity is not required for current patient care systems.

Plus they are in Arizona which doesn't have many earthquakes or hurricanes or anything.

#7 Reno

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Posted 20 August 2007 - 12:24 AM

Let me put it to you this way. I might trust my doctor if he said i would be going under for a couple of days while he operated, but things change when you start talking about going under for decades if not longer. Your not just trusting one person, your trusting hundreds. When you start talking about long stretches of time, you have to include a host of unpredictable variables. Will the economy remain stable, will the chemical suppliers remain in business, will weather patterns change... and on and on and on. If i was terminal then i might think about it. I mean at that point you have nothing to loose. Otherwise, i would be happy just wait for something more promising.

This kind of reminds me of that movie forever young. Go to sleep for a year and wakeup 50 years down the road.

#8 Neurosail

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Posted 20 August 2007 - 01:04 AM

Let me put it to you this way. I might trust my doctor if he said i would be going under for a couple of days while he operated, but things change when you start talking about going under for decades if not longer. Your not just trusting one person, your trusting hundreds. When you start talking about long stretches of time, you have to include a host of unpredictable variables. Will the economy remain stable, will the chemical suppliers remain in business, will weather patterns change... and on and on and on. If i was terminal then i might think about it. I mean at that point you have nothing to loose. Otherwise, i would be happy just wait for something more promising.

This kind of reminds me of that movie forever young. Go to sleep for a year and wakeup 50 years down the road.

Your real fear is loss of control. You have to depend on other people to reanimate you in the future. It is like that camp game where the campers stand in a circle and you are put in the center and told to close your eyes, and fall backwards into the circle. Will the other campers catch you or just let you fall to the ground? It is hard to gain that type of trust with other people that you don't know. The best way to overcome this fear is to get to know other cryonicist.

#9 Reno

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Posted 20 August 2007 - 01:21 AM

I agree, I don't trust people. You have to earn my trust. I've been burnt too many times just to trust that someone won't forget to pay the power or "nitrogen" bill. If a person has that much faith they might as well believe in religion and the blissful paradise that most consider the afterlife.

#10 Neurosail

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Posted 20 August 2007 - 03:46 AM

I agree, I don't trust people. You have to earn my trust. I've been burnt too many times just to trust that someone won't forget to pay the power or "nitrogen" bill. If a person has that much faith they might as well believe in religion and the blissful paradise that most consider the  afterlife.


Some people think of cryonics as a religion, but there is a major difference. In religion you're told to trust in a god that no one as ever seen or a prophet that has been dead for thousands of years.

In cryonics you can met and talk to people who are still alive. I just met Steve Van Sickle and Shannon Vyff at the Transvision in Chicago.
I'm going to the Alcor Conference and hope to meet other nice people.

When I joined back in 1993, Fred Chamberlain was still the president of Alcor. I talked to Linda Chamberlain and when Steve Bridge became president I talked to him also.

The people have changed over the years but all of them are dedicated to the goals of cryonics. So, how you trust that the people will care in the future? One reason is because other cryonicist will have families in the dewars. They will have their parents, husbands, wives, and children in the dewars. In the future, these will be the ancestors of the people, it would be in their interest to reanimate us with nanotechnology.

As per being burnt, I have been burnt several times and after each time it is hard to get back up and trust again. You have to trust yourself first before you can learn to trust other people.

#11 bgwowk

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Posted 20 August 2007 - 05:43 AM

Let me put it to you this way. I might trust my doctor if he said i would be going under for a couple of days while he operated, but things change when you start talking about going under for decades if not longer. Your not just trusting one person, your trusting hundreds. When you start talking about long stretches of time, you have to include a host of unpredictable variables. Will the economy remain stable, will the chemical suppliers remain in business, will weather patterns change... and on and on and on. If i was terminal then i might think about it. I mean at that point you have nothing to loose. Otherwise, i would be happy just wait for something more promising.

You make it sound like people who sign up for cryonics aren't waiting, and are just jumping into the tank. [lol] Actually you've got the waiting aspect backwards. People that signup for cryonics are willing to wait for something more promising to come along if and when they run out of medical options. The people that don't sign up for cryonics aren't willing to wait for anything better to come along. They are saying that nothing beyond medicine that is immediately available is ever worth waiting for.

I often see a millennialist mentality among life extensionists in which they seem to think that an era is coming "any decade now" in which all their problems will be over, and cryonics will be obsolete. There will never be such time. The reason is that it is always possible to become sick or injured more seriously than the medicine available at a particular time or place can fix. What constitutes irreversible sickness or injury will change as technology advances, but the basic fact that people can have and sometimes will have needs that exceed available medical capabilities will never change. Hence the need for medical time travel, be it by cryonics or some other name.

As a practical matter, if you decide you will never sign up until you actually need it, then realistically you will never sign up. Think about it. You are dying, emotionally and physically drained if not incapacitated, your family is distraught, facing medical bills and life without you, and you are going to say, "By the way, can I have $100K or $200K to be frozen?" It isn't going to happen. It's the worst negative stereotype of cryonics that cryonics happens this way, but in fact it almost never does because everyone involved, especially cryonics organizations, dislike that scenario as much as the general public does. That's why almost everyone who signs up for cryonics funds it with life insurance well in advance of need.

#12 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 02:33 PM

Here are a couple of more reasons why cryonics isn't for me:

1) So how about those costs? Okay, so I assume the payments you give to Alcor cover your freezing and maintenance process. Do they also cover the unknown reanimation process? If so--how? I mean, how can Alcor predict how much it will cost to reanimate and revive one from the dead in some future time frame?

Also, what about those costs to not only "bring you back from the dead", but halt/reverse the aging process? Or are we assuming a Star Trek world with, yay, no money and free love and all that jazz? Thomas Donaldson rails on science-fiction authors for writing fantastical tales with no basis in reality, but um, this utopia that cyronics depends on is more fantastical to me.

Okay, so somehow Alcor and other cyronics companies completely go against all normal business models and incur huge amounts of debt to overcome the various costs required to unfreeze, reanimate, revive from the dead, reverse the aging process, do X, Y and Z to your organs so you now fit into the modern world...

2) ...then what? How do you fit in? I mean, you'd be a curiosity in the new world. You would be to the new world as someone from medieval Europe would be to now. We'd be so behind the curve it may be entirely impossible to fit in and learn what was required of us. Especially in the highly specialized world we live in. If you extrapolate on current trends of technology, the "new world's" technology might be akin to magic to today's man. There is a reason why people hypothosize that science is our new religion and scientists are our new high priests. In the future, they may be the only ones able to communicate with our "gods"(of scientific understanding/technology). Our ability to grasp it and fit in would be negligible.

We have real world examples of this already, plenty of them--everything from the difficulties West Germany had to incorporating adult East German workers into the Western economy to rural Indians trying to learn the developments of the booming urban India. Why would they bother, except as a scientific or historic curiosity? I mean, they shouldn't exactly have a derth of population, all things considered, so it isn't a "we need manpower" issue. And since we're "legally dead", they'd have no legal obligation to bring us back. And please don't give me the "they'd be morally obligated to bring us back" argument--that's laughable for anyone who understands the corporate and political mindset. *We* may see *ourselves* as valuable, that they'd have a moral obligation to bring us back, even if it costs them a ton of money/resources to do so, but honestly, future societies may see us as sub-human in the same way we regard lesser primates and have no moral obligation to us.

3) And then, who knows if the cryonics companies would even survive to that stage, financially? Maybe they are hit with unforseen costs. Or forced to close down due to government mandate concerning space(land will only become more scarce as the years pass on). Or with new anti-aging tech emerging, simply become a curiosity that people forget about--and our cyronically frozen bodies end up in some museum.

These are just a few problems I've thought about with regards to cryonics in the last couple of days. While I understand this forum is about achieving immortality, most of us here are interested in science. And one of the basic rules of any scientific inquiry is *healthy skepticism*. Most of us here are quick to jump on the "bash religion bandwagon*(I'm an atheist myself), but somehow, when it comes to cryonics, all our logical reasoning, all our skepticism, goes straight out the window.

Me, I think our money, efforts and time can be better focused on other avenues of life extension. Yes, achieving life extension is a worthy scientific(if not societal--and I say "if not", because I have some grave misgivings as to what immortality might mean for society, for the "have-nots" versus the "haves") goal and should be pursued...and at that point, utilized for optimum effect for all of society. But if we're going to do it, lets do it right. Lets focus our priorities, instead of use the shot-gun approach. The later could erode credibility at best, and at worst, waste precious time, resources and energy, among other things.

Edited by suspire, 21 August 2007 - 02:59 PM.


#13 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 02:58 PM

I will add one thing:

If you do think we'll "solve" all the complications of the cryonics process, and aging itself, within the next 20 to 30 years, and you're about to die now, then yes, maybe cryonics is worth it--chances are Alcor will still be around and perhaps costs won't be prohibitive, and maybe society can incorporate you into it without too much trouble, etc.

Personally, I'd still rather leave my money to my children or to society--donate it to charity or science or what have you. Out of the entire field of life extension, none strikes me as self-interested(read: selfish), as cryonics. But hey, if you don't have kids or care to leave them money, and if you don't care to donate to the scientific fields of study that will revive you from the dead, but hope to passively reap the benefits of it all the same, so be it.

Still, if you're sold on this ultimate selfish form of life-extension, I have to wonder why you think any future generation would be less selfish than you. I mean, if you've used all your money and effort for personal cryonic stasis, why do you think someone else in the unknown future would be more generous towards you? Cryonics, all told, strikes me as the apex of narcissism.

Edited by suspire, 21 August 2007 - 03:12 PM.


#14 Luna

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 04:12 PM

Why do you think life extension is selfish?
Don't forget that by paying for your own life extension you also promote research which helps to extend other's lifespans.

And most of the people here work to extend theirs and other's lifespans which is not truly selfish.

Sure we all want it, so you say we might be selfish, but we want it for you too, and for everyone else.

The idea is that we don't want people to die, may it be us or may it be any other living person.

#15 Live Forever

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 04:25 PM

1) So how about those costs? Okay, so I assume the payments you give to Alcor cover your freezing and maintenance process. Do they also cover the unknown reanimation process? If so--how? I mean, how can Alcor predict how much it will cost to reanimate and revive one from the dead in some future time frame?

No one knows how much it will cost, because no one knows how to revive people yet. However, the cost of any technology or medical procedure comes down over time. Since "time" is one thing we have plenty of once someone is frozen, then presumably there will be a point at which it will be cost effective begin such procedures. (and yes, it would be taken out of your patient fund that is set up when you are frozen, unless it was something that was seen as "morally right" by a future society and funded via public money or something like that, but I would imagine not)

Also, what about those costs to not only "bring you back from the dead", but halt/reverse the aging process?

Well, presumably any society that has figured out how to reverse the cryonics process has also figured out how to reverse the aging process. As it appears now, aging is a less complicated problem. (especially when it comes to rebuilding entire bodies for neuropatients and things like that)

Okay, so somehow Alcor and other cyronics companies completely go against all normal business models and incur huge amounts of debt to overcome the various costs required to unfreeze, reanimate, revive from the dead, reverse the aging process, do X, Y and Z to your organs so you now fit into the modern world...

Nope, no debt. That is one of (at least Alcor's) core philosophies, to always operate in the black. (at least to my understanding)

2) ...then what? How do you fit in? I mean, you'd be a curiosity in the new world. You would be to the new world as someone from medieval Europe would be to now. We'd be so behind the curve it may be entirely impossible to fit in and learn what was required of us. Especially in the highly specialized world we live in. If you extrapolate on current trends of technology, the "new world's" technology might be akin to magic to today's man. There is a reason why people hypothosize that science is our new religion and scientists are our new high priests. In the future, they may be the only ones able to communicate with our "gods"(of scientific understanding/technology). Our ability to grasp it and fit in would be negligible.

We have real world examples of this already, plenty of them--everything from the difficulties West Germany had to incorporating adult East German workers into the Western economy to rural Indians trying to learn the developments of the booming urban India. Why would they bother, except as a scientific or historic curiosity? I mean, they shouldn't exactly have a derth of population, all things considered, so it isn't a "we need manpower" issue. And since we're "legally dead", they'd have no legal obligation to bring us back. And please don't give me the "they'd be morally obligated to bring us back" argument--that's laughable for anyone who understands the corporate and political mindset. *We* may see *ourselves* as valuable, that they'd have a moral obligation to bring us back, even if it costs them a ton of money/resources to do so, but honestly, future societies may see us as sub-human in the same way we regard lesser primates and have no moral obligation to us.

So you are saying we should just kill anyone that doesn't fit into a society perfectly and is backwards? That is what your argument amounts to. I don't believe that just because someone doesn't understand all the advances that have been made, that they are useless. If someone appeared from the 18th century, lets say, you are saying you couldn't teach them how to be a fisherman, or how to work in some type of production plant, or how to do any of a million different things? Just because there is a learning curve doesn't mean people can't learn to integrate themselves into a new society, and it certainly doesn't mean we should kill them just to save the hassle of letting them be allowed to try. Killing people is never a good solution.


3) And then, who knows if the cryonics companies would even survive to that stage, financially? Maybe they are hit with unforseen costs. Or forced to close down due to government mandate concerning space(land will only become more scarce as the years pass on). Or with new anti-aging tech emerging, simply become a curiosity that people forget about--and our cyronically frozen bodies end up in some museum.

Well, then, there is no harm done that would be greater than being buried or burned then, would there? There is absolutely no hope of surviving if you are buried or burned. However, everything I have looked into about Alcor just reinforces my opinion that they are going to be around for the long haul. They have a very stable business model, and take in loads more money every year than it costs to maintain the patients there. They are located in a part of the country with not many natural disasters. (hurricanes, earthquakes, etc) The patients could always be transported to another state (or country) if the government decided to interfere, although that seems like a remote possibility if you look at the history of laws and governance in the US.


Me, I think our money, efforts and time can be better focused on other avenues of life extension. Yes, achieving life extension is a worthy scientific(if not societal--and I say "if not", because I have some grave misgivings as to what immortality might mean for society, for the "have-nots" versus the "haves") goal and should be pursued...and at that point, utilized for optimum effect for all of society. But if we're going to do it, lets do it right. Lets focus our priorities, instead of use the shot-gun approach. The later could erode credibility at best, and at worst,  waste precious time, resources and energy, among other things.

That is fine for you, but I personally want as many approaches being tried as possible. I also want a fall back plan in place in case we do not achieve extreme life extension in time. (although, as Dr. Wowk points out, even if we do achieve virtual biological immortality, there is still a place for cryonics in that society, because there are always things that are beyond the current medical capabilities, at least in the immediate and medium term future)

If you do think we'll "solve" all the complications of the cryonics process, and aging itself, within the next 20 to 30 years, and you're about to die now, then yes, maybe cryonics is worth it--chances are Alcor will still be around and perhaps costs won't be prohibitive, and maybe society can incorporate you into it without too much trouble, etc.

Actually, it doesn't matter if it is 20 to 30 or 200 to 300 years. The good thing about cryonics is that time is something that you have plenty of. Also, the longer it takes, the less prohibitive the costs will be.


Personally, I'd still rather leave my money to my children or to society--donate it to charity or science or what have you. Out of the entire field of life extension, none strikes me as self-interested(read: selfish), as cryonics.

That is fine. You can choose to do whatever you would like to do with your money, but everyone should be allowed to make their own decisions on what they would like to do. There is nothing more inherently selfish about cryonics than wanting any other type of life extension to work, imo. Anyone who takes supplements and looks after themselves, or desires SENS to work so that they can continue to live, or practices CR, or anything else having to do with wanting to live a long time is a bit selfish I would say, but I don't see why wanting to save people that have been frozen is any worse than wanting to save people that haven't been frozen. They are all people.


But hey, if you don't have kids or care to leave them money, and if you don't care to donate to the scientific fields of study that will revive you from the dead, but hope to passively reap the benefits of it all the same, so be it.

Uuuh. So what if they donate to both? (and the larger amount going to the scientific fields of study?)

#16 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 04:34 PM

Why do you think life extension is selfish?
Don't forget that by paying for your own life extension you also promote research which helps to extend other's lifespans.

And most of the people here work to extend theirs and other's lifespans which is not truly selfish.

Sure we all want it, so you say we might be selfish, but we want it for you too, and for everyone else.

The idea is that we don't want people to die, may it be us or may it be any other living person.


No, I don't think life extension is selfish. Read my arguments--I have issue with cryonics, not the entire field of life extension, or I wouldn't be on this forum.

#17 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 05:18 PM

LiveForever,

You've raised some good counter-points and I'm always open to the opposing point of view. I hope, in turn, you are also open to my position and the concerns I've raised.

1) On the monetary point of view, I'm still unconvinced. The only argument that you've given that I do agree with is costs, generally speaking, will drop over time *if* the technology becomes widespread and in use by the general public. That said, with other emerging forms of life extension technology in the works, forms that are much more viable, I doubt costs will drop for the entire cryonics process. I may be wrong, however. The rest of it--well, simply put, I just don't think the money Alcor has set aside for all its various costs for the entire procedure, including maintenance, will cover it. Too many places where things can go wrong. I mean, who knows what kind of brain damage or memory loss or what have you happens between time of "legal death" and cryonic freezing. Or if any of our memories/mind will be revived at all? The costs can wrack up at ridiculous rates when you consider all the different things that might be required to put you back together at even a semblence of what you once were.

2) I have never, at any point, advocated we should kill people who are backwards or less advanced. My job is in the non-profit field--if anything, I suspect I am more aware of the plight of the poor, the "have-nots" in today's society than the average forum reader. Which is why I raised the points I have raised--I know how today's society treats those without the education, money and abilities to fit into society. I can only imagine how much worse it'll be when you amplify the difference by ten-fold. If you'll look at what I am saying, you'll see I am not advocating death. I'll boil it down, however: I simply think future society will not care to revive or incorporate people in cryonic stasis into their society. We'll be an amusing curiosity at best to them...and a lot less in a worse case scenerio.

3) I can see worse things than death. Maybe we'll be used as indefinite "slave/bonded labor" to repay our debts to society upon being revived(don't think this is likely?--most of the world still uses this system, including such economic "giants" as India and China), maybe our organs will be harvested, maybe we'll be put in a zoo as an exhibit. Or being revived in a semi-zombie-like state due to damage to the brain(yes, I've read Alcor's bit about not reviving without being sure that they can "fix" you, but pardon my skepticism--I've yet to see a major, experimental medical procedure happen that hasn't failed dozens of times initially and continue to fail frequently down the road). While some of you may argue there is no fate worse than death, I'm of the school of thought that there are fates worse than death.

4) I do not think there will ever be enough cryonics patients to make this field anything more than a curiosity on the fringe.

5) I think it is important to prioritize research, energies and efforts. For instance, there are tons of different ideas being tossed around for alternate fuel sources. One of the big ones is...ethanol. Yet, just a glance at this forum and one can see why ethanol is one of the worst ideas for alternate fuels. If we pursue this line, with all the time, money, energy and effort expended upon it, we will be sacrificing much--from credibility to results to possible increased levels of starvation. We need to focus on what works, what *will* really work. There are many hypothesis on how to understand the human mind--you can choose phrenology, but it is unlikely you'll get solid results. In the same way, I am advocating focusing our efforts in the right fields of study once it becomes apparent other fields of study will not yield the results desired.

Credibility is a big issue for me. Donaldson's essay on "science-fiction" is a prime example. Beyond all the holes in logic that one could drive a truck through in that essay, one of the first things I thought was: Why? Of all the essays he could write, why take on...science-fiction writers. Why not take on the political framework, the scientific establishment, the health care system, etc as it relates to cryonics? These sorts of arguments only helps to emphasize cryonics place in the realm of pseudo-science and I suspect cryonics may eventually go the way of the dodo or, well, frankly, phrenology.

6) Clearly, we all do self-interested things. I have no issue with that. I am saying that cryonics takes it to the extreme, the height of selfishness. Your Alcor plan, as far as I know, does not go for research into the field of cryonics or the like. It is for the cryonics stasis process and maintenance(and you've said it also, somehow or the other, may cover revival). I don't really see where, in this plan, you could also allocate money for research in cryonics. Or how it could be utilized, on a wide level, for anyone but the "haves" of society. When compared to advances in things like stem-cell research or nanotechnology, which could easily have large scale application, it doesn't make much sense to me.

7) Who will be our advocates in the future? I'm not sure how many people have undergone cryonic stasis thus far? 100? 200? That is nothing in terms of population, or more importantly, political and lobbying power. Coupled with the fact that the majority of those undergoing cryonic stasis are surely giving away most of their money to undergo stasis--and not to their descendents or other possible advocates for their revival--there will be few who will care about their fate(beyond maybe historians who might be curious about first-hand accounts of the time period), etc. If we use the basic principles of self-interest, we will have few who will care about our plight.

8) It is certainly laudable to devote money to different venues. For instance, I've noticed that wing_girl (Shannon Vyff) gives to a variety of charities and causes. That is great. But here is what I am trying to say:

There will always be people and groups who will try and sell immortality. The idea is as old as society itself. When we approach this topic, however, we should do so with skepticism and with a firm idea of what we're trying to accomplish and how we will do it. There are many viable forms available to us to achieve our goals--lets concentrate on those that are the most practical and realistic. Funnel our money towards a few very specific avenues that are most likely to yield results and afford us a credible position in the debate. If new and exciting technologies come about(for instance, stuff like stem cell and nanotechology were not around when cyronics was first proposed), lets investigate them and potentially change our focus towards those avenues. Always keep an open mind to new possibilities and be prepared to dismiss the old theories, even those we were once formerly heavily attached and invested in. This is the key to true scientific inquiry, and in my mind, success in the arena of life extension.

Perhaps scientific advances can be made in the field of *cryonics research*--how it may impact cell decay, alternate applications of the technology, space travel, etc--but companies like Alcor are primarily about cryonic stasis, not research, unless I am wildly off mark(I am not saying they don't do research at all, but how many peer-reviewed scientific, as opposed to press-related, articles and journals has Alcor put out in the field of research? I've seen a few items on their webpage, but it seems to be done mostly by other researchers/labs/universities).

In the end, each will decide what they want to do with their time, money and effort. I've only raised these concerns, because of the near-fanatical support of cryonics; even if I am wrong, I think it is important to ask these questions, to make people reconsider their positions and perhaps re-prioritize their interests when it comes to life extension.

Edited by Shannon, 31 December 2007 - 04:08 AM.
added name


#18 Luna

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 05:25 PM

Cryonics and life extension are almost the same.
Eventually, people don't want to die.
Why is it wrong to go cryonics?

#19 Neurosail

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 07:57 PM

My job is in the non-profit field


So if people stop donating to your charity, you don't get a paycheck.

Now I understand.

Most people here donate to charity and never tell or post where or how much they donate.

My cryonics is very cheap. I pay $18.00 per month for the insurance and about $500.00 per year for the membership fees. That is less than 0.01% of my income.

#20 Live Forever

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 08:14 PM

My job is in the non-profit field


So if people stop donating to your charity, you don't get a paycheck.

Now I understand.

Most people here donate to charity and never tell or post where or how much they donate.

My cryonics is very cheap. I pay $18.00 per month for the insurance and about $500.00 per year for the membership fees. That is less than 0.01% of my income.

You make more than $7 million a year, Neurosail? ($716 a year is 0.01% of $7,160,000, maybe you meant 1% instead? If not, can I have some money? haha)

#21 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 08:38 PM

So if people stop donating to your charity, you don't get a paycheck.

Now I understand.


Wow. Talk about an ad hominen attack. Nice. When you can't go after the argument, go after the person!

No, actually, 98 percent of our money comes from about six people(all wealthy ex-businesspeople who've devoted the rest of their money and time to poverty alleviation). It really doesn't matter to my paycheck whether you donate to the organization I work for, though the more donations we get, the more work we can do on the ground. And since I am relatively independently wealthy, most of my work is pro bono. But hey, you know, it's easier to just slam people.

Out of my entire post, that's the one line you pick. I am not even sure how it applies to my argument, whatsoever, unless you're implying I am trying to get people to donate to the particular charity(which I've never named) I work for over...cryonics? If so, uh, no. Read my posts again--my main alternative for funding Alcor is....funding other research organizations in life extension. And my charity has zero to do with life extension. Instead of looking for some ulterior motive for why I have issues with cryonics, consider I may actually have issues with cryonics for, uh, the reasons I raised.

My cryonics is very cheap. I pay $18.00 per month for the insurance and about $500.00 per year for the membership fees. That is less than 0.01% of my income.


Ah. You're a cyronics client.

Now I understand.

Edited by suspire, 21 August 2007 - 08:55 PM.


#22 Athanasios

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 08:49 PM

1) So how about those costs? Okay, so I assume the payments you give to Alcor cover your freezing and maintenance process. Do they also cover the unknown reanimation process? If so--how? I mean, how can Alcor predict how much it will cost to reanimate and revive one from the dead in some future time frame?

No one knows how much it will cost, because no one knows how to revive people yet. However, the cost of any technology or medical procedure comes down over time. Since "time" is one thing we have plenty of once someone is frozen, then presumably there will be a point at which it will be cost effective begin such procedures. (and yes, it would be taken out of your patient fund that is set up when you are frozen, unless it was something that was seen as "morally right" by a future society and funded via public money or something like that, but I would imagine not)

Compounding does wonders to savings over a 100 years.

#23 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 08:52 PM

1) So how about those costs? Okay, so I assume the payments you give to Alcor cover your freezing and maintenance process. Do they also cover the unknown reanimation process? If so--how? I mean, how can Alcor predict how much it will cost to reanimate and revive one from the dead in some future time frame?

No one knows how much it will cost, because no one knows how to revive people yet. However, the cost of any technology or medical procedure comes down over time. Since "time" is one thing we have plenty of once someone is frozen, then presumably there will be a point at which it will be cost effective begin such procedures. (and yes, it would be taken out of your patient fund that is set up when you are frozen, unless it was something that was seen as "morally right" by a future society and funded via public money or something like that, but I would imagine not)

Compounding does wonders to savings over a 100 years.


I agree with this. However, unforseen costs may arise(like relocation--it's happened once to Alcor), new instrumentation, replacing parts, damage to existing parts, etc. The variables in a process that may take an unknown time frame to come to fruition makes it difficult to calculate what might be left of savings for the revival process, etc.

#24 Athanasios

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:05 PM

I agree with this. However, unforseen costs may arise(like relocation--it's happened once to Alcor), new instrumentation, replacing parts, damage to existing parts, etc. The variables in a process that may take an unknown time frame to come to fruition makes it difficult to calculate what might be left of savings for the revival process, etc.

Unknowns are risks I am willing to take. It sure beats the odds of burial.
as for:

I'll boil it down, however: I simply think future society will not care to revive or incorporate people in cryonic stastis into their society. We'll be an amusing curiosity at best to them...and a lot less in a worse case scenerio....Who will be our advocates in the future? I'm not sure how many people have undergone cryonic stasis thus far? 100? 200? That is nothing in terms of population, or more importantly, political and lobbying power. Coupled with the fact that the majority of those undergoing cryonic stasis are surely giving away most of their money to undergo stasis--and not to their descendents or other possible advocates for their revival--there will be few who will care about their fate(beyond maybe historians who might be curious about first-hand accounts of the time period), etc. If we use the basic principles of self-interest, we will have few who will care about our plight.


The people who are pretty much guaranteed to care will be other cyonics members (such as it is now).

No cryonics member I have met has thought the program to be a sure thing, but again, it sure beats the odds of burial.

Some think it is socially irresponsible because it is selfish but very few people I know can live up to that claim without being hypocritical.

#25 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:13 PM

The people who are pretty much guaranteed to care will be other cyonics members (such as it is now).

No cryonics member I have met has thought the program to be a sure thing, but again, it sure beats the odds of burial.

Some think it is socially irresponsible because it is selfish but very few people I know can live up to that claim without being hypocritical.


We can definitely go back and forth over whether there will be enough people interested and invested in cryonics to make sure those already in stasis come out when other life extension technologies arrive. My belief is: No, because those people who are alive will have switched their interests to the life extension technologies that work and wouldn't care about cryonics, much less some 200 year old person they have no personal investment or attachment to. It goes hand and hand with the whole self-interested theme of cryonics and/or life extension as a whole.

As for selfishness--this is a basic human emotion/attitude/mindset. I'd even argue that much of society's progress is because of selfishness. I think, however, there are degrees of it. I've covered multiple times why I think there is a difference between funding Alcor, funding lab-based cryonics research and funding other forms of life extension when it comes to "selfishness"; it is a matter of degrees and net result for society. If you don't agree, that's fine--I've said my bit on it and it probably doesn't help anyone for me to repeat the same arguments.

#26 Athanasios

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:20 PM

We can definitely go back and forth over whether there will be enough people interested and invested in cryonics to make sure those already in stasis come out when other life extension technologies arrive. My belief is: No, because those people who are alive will have switched their interests to the life extension technologies that work and wouldn't care about cryonics, much less some 200 year old person they have no personal investment or attachment to. It goes hand and hand with the whole self-interested theme of cryonics and/or life extension as a whole.

see:

I often see a millennialist mentality among life extensionists in which they seem to think that an era is coming "any decade now" in which all their problems will be over, and cryonics will be obsolete.  There will never be such time.  The reason is that it is always possible to become sick or injured more seriously than the medicine available at a particular time or place can fix.  What constitutes irreversible sickness or injury will change as technology advances, but the basic fact that people can have and sometimes will have needs that exceed available medical capabilities will never change.  Hence the need for medical time travel, be it by cryonics or some other name.


My guess is that people will want the program to continue because of the above.

#27 Live Forever

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:27 PM

No matter what arguments anyone could ever make against cryonics succeeding, it always has a better chance of working than being buried instead.

#28 suspire

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:36 PM

cnorwood, LiveForever: I see what both of you are saying and it is a fair argument. People want to continue to live. Makes sense. All I am saying is that in terms of cost versus effectiveness, etc, it probably makes more sense to focus your time and money into alternative life extension research. My fear is that a scatter-shot approach undermines us rather than strengthens us. But I've given my opinions on it and each person will come to their own conclusions as it fits their current situation and outlook on life and society.

My own plan is to donate what money I can to very specific life extension research and hope it'll pan out before I die(I suspect I've got at least another 50 years to go, if not more, considering how long lived my family members have been). If it doesn't come by then, my money goes to family and specific charities, and organs go to donor banks.

#29 Athanasios

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:44 PM

cnorwood, LiveForever: I see what both of you are saying and it is a fair argument. People want to continue to live. Makes sense. All I am saying is that in terms of cost versus effectiveness, etc, it probably makes more sense to focus your time and money into alternative life extension research. My fear is that a scatter-shot approach undermines us rather than strengthens us. But I've given my opinions on it and each person will come to their own conclusions as it fits their current situation and outlook on life and society.

My own plan is to donate what money I can to very specific life extension research and hope it'll pan out before I die(I suspect I've got at least another 50 years to go, if not more, considering how long lived my family members have been). If it doesn't come by then, my money goes to family and specific charities, and organs go to donor banks.


Currently, I pay $600 a year for my fees and insurance. My insurance plan is guaranteed not to increase as i get older. So over 40 years that is about $25,000. That is a drop in the bucket compared to what my contributions will be over that period of time. Now putting that insurance money towards research is another matter but that goes back to the selfish argument. For me the math works out but I don't know about your situation.

#30 Live Forever

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Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:46 PM

cnorwood, LiveForever: I see what both of you are saying and it is a fair argument. People want to continue to live. Makes sense. All I am saying is that in terms of cost versus effectiveness, etc, it probably makes more sense to focus your time and money into alternative life extension research. My fear is that a scatter-shot approach undermines us rather than strengthens us. But I've given my opinions on it and each person will come to their own conclusions as it fits their current situation and outlook on life and society.

My own plan is to donate what money I can to very specific life extension research and hope it'll pan out before I die(I suspect I've got at least another 50 years to go, if not more, considering how long lived my family members have been). If it doesn't come by then, my money goes to family and specific charities, and organs go to donor banks.

Fair enough. You should definitely put your money and efforts towards the things that you think are most worthy in your eyes. Cryonics (like most other medical options) should be optional. I do find it funny that some people would spend a couple hundred thousand dollars (through insurance) for an open heart surgery or other big surgery, but would think $80,000 for a cryonic suspension (also through insurance) was outlandish.




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