I think you have a particular disorder Prometheus. You are unrepentantly a contrarian. Anything that you can oppose you will just to get to hear your own voice or words in this case.
If I have an affliction, as you say, it is that I have a tendency to exhaustively research the matters surrounding a topic and then formulate a view that is very difficult to uproot. Especially by those who inhabit the other side of the spectrum.
Fantasy? The real fantasy is that you think she'd only have substantial amnesia. Point of fact if a brain were to have been regenerated in her skull there'd still have been nothing of HER there.
How can you be so sure? As the pathology report mentioned, her frontal and temporal lobes were largely intact.
It would be the same as a clone or twin with no memories to boot. Where is the value to Terri herSELF in that? None mister!
Tone it down. That is not for you - nor for me - to judge. There were some other parts of her brain that were also intact and considering that a) we are not entirely sure how much of her memory would have persisted and b) our understanding of long term memory encoding is incomplete then we should not be rushing to any authoritative conclusions on memory. In any case, consider this: supposing you woke one day to find that you could not remember a single thing - does that disqualify you from the right to exist?
THE LAST THING THE FIELD OF CRYONICS NEEDS IS THE EGREGIOUSLY BAD PR WE'D GET FROM ENTERTAINING THE SUSPENSION OF SUCH HOPELESS CASES. We must maintain some amount of respectability.
Once again, it is not for you to judge which cases are deserving of suspension versus irreversible obliteration. I place life above PR, and even the consideration of "respectability". Notwithstanding the fact that the degree of technological advancement required to repair and reanimate a cryopreserved deceased person would have no trouble at all dealing with PVS related trauma.
SENS a fantasy? Oh that's rich, I suppose you are now a microbiologist gerontologist and an engineer, right?
What I am is knowledgeable and highly motivated to achieve escape velocity. My professional life is my business. At present, the SENS hypotheses that claim to confer extraordinary longevity via proposals including a) the eradication of cancer, b) the reduction of dysfucntional cells, c) the replenishment of youthful cells and d) REDOX related mitochondrial dysfucntion are completely reliant on non-existent technologies. I'm not to first person to have felt doubts on SENS and neither will I be the last. I am, however, as you have pointed out characterisitically difficult to sway once I have formed an opinion - given no new information comes to light - becuase of my tendency to research and think deeply on matters before discussing them.
Why don't you piss off somewhere and leave us in peace.
I am giving you a formal warning to tone it down.
You certainly don't in my opinion show the hallmarks of actually being an immortalist/life extensionist. Are you signed up for cryonics? Hmm, I seem to recall you are contrarian to that too. Are you practicing CR, taking any of the recommended supplements? These are rhetorical.
Even so, they invite a response. You mean I don't show the hallmarks of a fantasist who is happy to frolick in the field of dreams and entrust his future and that of his loved ones in the hands of others?
These are rhetorical. I think your constant harping has shown well enough without need of answering these that you don't truly support the movement, you oppose it at every turn by all the evidence. You are at best a troll, at worst an enemy within our gates.
FQ
I have attempted to sincerely answer your questions on my position. I am also reminding you of the formal warning you have been given. I understand you feel strongly about certain issues and you clearly disagree with where I stand but you can make your point without resorting to ad hominem-style prose. I will summarize by saying this: Cryopreservation will always be better than decomposition. People should feel free to explore whatever nutritional and pharmacological (and shortly genetic) regimens are available to them to optimise their genetic profile. Having SENS and MPrize even in their existing format is better than not having them at all. However, I feel it is incumbent on me both as an individual and as a Director of this Institute to act in the best of my ability to enhance our chances of achieving escape velocity - even if that means that I have to publicly criticize SENS for not doing all it can in order to meet its own mission. Some may see this as counterproductive but I see it as a clarion call that time is running out and a greater sense of urgency must be married to more pragmatic short term solutions that can be designed using existing technology.
There are subtle hints in the literature that the scientific community is beginning to form the view that essentially all disease processes including the ability to deal with major trauma (with the exception of congenital disorders) are largely a consequence of the aging process. This is very encouraging because it means that the aging process itself can be recognised as a disease process with the (hopefully) inevitable unleashing of the full force of the world's leading research institutions towards understanding and dealing with aging itself rather than the numerous symptoms associated with it. Our community will have the opportunity to contribute to the tipping point of the paradigm shifting event of when that realization takes place on a global scale. Being grounded to a firm scientific substrate becomes of profound importance if we are to meet our mission objectives.
Now a question for you, James. Why the deathist position on the matter of Terry Schiavo?