I'm thinking about signing up. I'm 26 with no health problems. What could I expect to pay for the life insurance that would cover the contract?
I would prefer good freezing methods as opposed to the cheap ones.
Posted 08 February 2005 - 07:53 AM
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In 1990 the Canadian province of British Columbia enacted a law that specifically banned the sale of cryonics services in that province. In 2002 the Solicitor General (Canadian equivalent of a state Attorney General) issued a written clarification stating that the law only prohibited funeral homes from selling cryonics arrangements. Cryonics could still be performed in the province, even with the paid assistance of funeral homes, provided they were not involved in the direct sale of cryonics. Despite these assurances, anxiety about the law remains.
Posted 08 February 2005 - 08:43 AM
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Posted 08 February 2005 - 06:38 PM
I know that it is impossible to pay for being freezed after you die, but you have to pay a monthly prize from the moment you decide you wanna do it. Now, my question is, when it'll be possible to defrost- shall they defrost first those who has paid earlyer? I mean shall they bring back to live again those who paid more, so it will be worth to actually sign in in an earlyer age?
Posted 08 February 2005 - 07:20 PM
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Posted 09 February 2005 - 01:54 PM
(emphasis added)Long-Term Care
Currently Alcor patients are stored under liquid nitrogen at a temperature of -196°C. The liquid nitrogen is held in vacuum-insulated dewars that require replenishment every few weeks. Liquid nitrogen is used because it is inexpensive and reliable.
Alcor is currently experimenting with an alternative "vapor phase" storage system that would retain the safety and reliability advantages of liquid nitrogen, but allow patients to be maintained at controlled temperatures warmer than liquid nitrogen. This will reduce or eliminate fracturing injury.
Posted 09 February 2005 - 08:19 PM
Sounds like a sure preservation Jay... All that's left is to slove the problem of defrosting back to live...Long-Term Care
Currently Alcor patients are stored under liquid nitrogen at a temperature of -196°C. The liquid nitrogen is held in vacuum-insulated dewars that require replenishment every few weeks. Liquid nitrogen is used because it is inexpensive and reliable.
Alcor is currently experimenting with an alternative "vapor phase" storage system that would retain the safety and reliability advantages of liquid nitrogen, but allow patients to be maintained at controlled temperatures warmer than liquid nitrogen. This will reduce or eliminate fracturing injury.
Posted 09 February 2005 - 09:55 PM
Sounds like a sure preservation Jay... All that's left is to slove the problem of defrosting back to live...
Posted 10 February 2005 - 02:16 AM
Edited by whoa182, 10 February 2005 - 05:16 AM.
Posted 10 February 2005 - 04:40 AM
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