A Conversation about cyronics
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A Conversation about cyronics
By Sonia Arrison
TechNewsWorld
10/12/07 4:00 AM PT
Hospitals around the country are wary of giving up bodies for cryopreservation. In at least one state, Arizona, legislators have considered making it nearly impossible for individuals to choose to be cryonically suspended. This brings up the universal question of individual self-determination as well as the proper role of government.
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Last weekend, 150 people attended the Alcor life extension conference in Scottsdale, Ariz. The main subject was cryonics, the use of technology to cool and preserve the human body with the aim of future revival. The technology, still speculative, raises many present-world issues.
In 2003, a daughter of Ted Williams attempted to stop the cryonic suspension of the Hall of Fame baseball player. Williams had signed a "family pact" asking to be preserved, but delays and a media circus ensued. He is not the only one that Alcor, the nation's leading cryonics organization, has had to fight to preserve.
Even with clear legal documentation, hospitals around the country are wary of giving up bodies for cryopreservation. In at least one state, Arizona, legislators have considered making it nearly impossible for individuals to choose to be cryonically suspended. This brings up the universal question of individual self-determination as well as the proper role of government.
Definition of 'Dead'
Fortunately, the Arizona legislation did not pass and individuals everywhere in the United States can choose to be stored in an Alcor tank instead of a hole in the ground after they are declared legally dead. Government should have no role in deciding one's fate after death so long as the individual's choice isn't harming anyone.
Alcor currently has 77 "patients" stored at their facility whose cells are technically still alive, albeit frozen, as well as 827 people signed up to get the treatment when current medical techniques cannot keep them alive any longer. This raises an interesting question. When, exactly, is someone really dead? To the average person on the street, this is an odd question, but within the scientific community there is controversy.
According to the law, you are dead when your heart stops beating. However, we all know of cases where someone's heart stopped beating and they were later revived. Consider also the multitudes of cases where children have fallen through ice and have been miraculously brought back to life even after an hour submerged in cold water. These examples demonstrate that it's possible for an individual to be alive even when the law states otherwise, and if one's body is cooled significantly, as Alcor aims to do, one's cells can be preserved. The hard part, which of course hasn't happened yet, is bringing someone back to life after cryonic suspension.
Hope in Nanotech
Respected scientists like nanotechnologist and public key cryptography coinventor Dr. Ralph Merkle think that molecular nanotechnology will make cryonics possible in the future. The theory is that as computing power grows and nanomedicine advances, tiny robotic arms smaller than mitochondrion will be able to enter a cryopreserved body and repair cell damage. While reviving a person from cryonic suspension won't happen any time soon, new methods for transporting and storing organs for donation may be closer to reality, thanks to some of Alcor's members.
Brian Wowk, a physicist and cryobiologist who performs research on low temperature preservation of tissue for medical applications, gave a fascinating talk explaining a process called "vitrification" that has been used successfully on animal organs. Vitrification is a way to freeze tissues and cells without damaging their structure the way ice does. If the process can be refined so that it doesn't poison the organ, it could be used to store human organs that otherwise might be wasted because the donor is in a different location than the recipient.
Opening Possibilities
That would be a huge win for society and a giant leap forward for the cryonics community, still at risk of being written off as wildly optimistic. Wild optimists, of course, are often the ones driving scientific discovery.
Few people thought it would ever be possible to launch airborne a large piece of machinery or to send a person to the moon. Despite this, the Wright brothers and the U.S. Apollo 11 mission succeeded. Perhaps one day a nanotechnologist and cryobiologist will join that list.
Until then, the cryonics community is doing interesting work that stimulates the mind and could produce important benefits for society. Meddlesome government types should leave them alone, and technology enthusiasts may want to attend their next conference.
TechNewsWorld
10/12/07 4:00 AM PT
Hospitals around the country are wary of giving up bodies for cryopreservation. In at least one state, Arizona, legislators have considered making it nearly impossible for individuals to choose to be cryonically suspended. This brings up the universal question of individual self-determination as well as the proper role of government.
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Learn how to increase qualified traffic, identify search terms that convert, and discover pages that influence conversion. Get White Paper.
Last weekend, 150 people attended the Alcor life extension conference in Scottsdale, Ariz. The main subject was cryonics, the use of technology to cool and preserve the human body with the aim of future revival. The technology, still speculative, raises many present-world issues.
In 2003, a daughter of Ted Williams attempted to stop the cryonic suspension of the Hall of Fame baseball player. Williams had signed a "family pact" asking to be preserved, but delays and a media circus ensued. He is not the only one that Alcor, the nation's leading cryonics organization, has had to fight to preserve.
Even with clear legal documentation, hospitals around the country are wary of giving up bodies for cryopreservation. In at least one state, Arizona, legislators have considered making it nearly impossible for individuals to choose to be cryonically suspended. This brings up the universal question of individual self-determination as well as the proper role of government.
Definition of 'Dead'
Fortunately, the Arizona legislation did not pass and individuals everywhere in the United States can choose to be stored in an Alcor tank instead of a hole in the ground after they are declared legally dead. Government should have no role in deciding one's fate after death so long as the individual's choice isn't harming anyone.
Alcor currently has 77 "patients" stored at their facility whose cells are technically still alive, albeit frozen, as well as 827 people signed up to get the treatment when current medical techniques cannot keep them alive any longer. This raises an interesting question. When, exactly, is someone really dead? To the average person on the street, this is an odd question, but within the scientific community there is controversy.
According to the law, you are dead when your heart stops beating. However, we all know of cases where someone's heart stopped beating and they were later revived. Consider also the multitudes of cases where children have fallen through ice and have been miraculously brought back to life even after an hour submerged in cold water. These examples demonstrate that it's possible for an individual to be alive even when the law states otherwise, and if one's body is cooled significantly, as Alcor aims to do, one's cells can be preserved. The hard part, which of course hasn't happened yet, is bringing someone back to life after cryonic suspension.
Hope in Nanotech
Respected scientists like nanotechnologist and public key cryptography coinventor Dr. Ralph Merkle think that molecular nanotechnology will make cryonics possible in the future. The theory is that as computing power grows and nanomedicine advances, tiny robotic arms smaller than mitochondrion will be able to enter a cryopreserved body and repair cell damage. While reviving a person from cryonic suspension won't happen any time soon, new methods for transporting and storing organs for donation may be closer to reality, thanks to some of Alcor's members.
Brian Wowk, a physicist and cryobiologist who performs research on low temperature preservation of tissue for medical applications, gave a fascinating talk explaining a process called "vitrification" that has been used successfully on animal organs. Vitrification is a way to freeze tissues and cells without damaging their structure the way ice does. If the process can be refined so that it doesn't poison the organ, it could be used to store human organs that otherwise might be wasted because the donor is in a different location than the recipient.
Opening Possibilities
That would be a huge win for society and a giant leap forward for the cryonics community, still at risk of being written off as wildly optimistic. Wild optimists, of course, are often the ones driving scientific discovery.
Few people thought it would ever be possible to launch airborne a large piece of machinery or to send a person to the moon. Despite this, the Wright brothers and the U.S. Apollo 11 mission succeeded. Perhaps one day a nanotechnologist and cryobiologist will join that list.
Until then, the cryonics community is doing interesting work that stimulates the mind and could produce important benefits for society. Meddlesome government types should leave them alone, and technology enthusiasts may want to attend their next conference.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
Transhumanism marches on, I guess.
Although, to be honest, I couldn't stand the idea of living forever with the folks who are the most outspoken transhumanists. I'd have to kill them.
Although, to be honest, I couldn't stand the idea of living forever with the folks who are the most outspoken transhumanists. I'd have to kill them.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
I really have no problem with people who want to freeze themselves. What's really the big deal here?
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
I wonder where the bible thumpers stand on this? Is it considered playing god? Do they have the same objections here that they do to cloning?
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
Im not a bible thumper by any stretch of the imagination, but I don't see how cloning and cryogenics are similar in any way. One is about the preservation of a single life (or soul), and the other is about creating a new life (or soul).Klast Brell wrote:I wonder where the bible thumpers stand on this? Is it considered playing god? Do they have the same objections here that they do to cloning?
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
It would certainly raise some moral questions about the human life, personality, and the soul. However the physical act is no different from CPR which is performed today. Some extremists will certainly object (always some that will), but the mainstream will not likely care.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
I personally don't see why you wouldn't want to. You're dead anyway, why not take a 2nd shot at life 500 years in the future? *shrug* Again I think it's completely a personal decision that shouldn't have any sway by politics or religion. Of course both of those want their fingers in every facet of life but whatever.
I would want them to freeze me and not wake me up until they could digitally recreate me in electronic form so that I could live for as long as I wanted in a real life simulation starting from the time that I died. Like in that one episode of star trek where they captured that dude in a cube or whatever the fuck that was. That's gonna rock.
I would want them to freeze me and not wake me up until they could digitally recreate me in electronic form so that I could live for as long as I wanted in a real life simulation starting from the time that I died. Like in that one episode of star trek where they captured that dude in a cube or whatever the fuck that was. That's gonna rock.
Fallakin Kuvari wrote:Because laws that require voters to have an ID (Something they are required to have anyway) are bad....
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
OK consider this. Most Christians believe that at the point of death the soul is transported directly to heaven or hell. No waiting. No splinting biblical hairs.
"Ronald Reagan is in heaven now" "Mathew Shepard is in Hell" Etc.
So pulling someone out of heaven, or especially out of hell for another go around might be considered playing god.
"Ronald Reagan is in heaven now" "Mathew Shepard is in Hell" Etc.
So pulling someone out of heaven, or especially out of hell for another go around might be considered playing god.
"A few months ago, I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. My heart and best intentions still tell me that's true, but the facts and evidence tell me it is not." - Ronald Reagan 1987
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
If they are going to be revived, then they won't be in heaven/hell because they aren't properly dead yet.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
How is this any different from resuscitating someone who is dead via CPR and shock paddles? If there is no waiting then we are already playing God and there still isn't a horrible outcry from most Christians.So pulling someone out of heaven, or especially out of hell for another go around might be considered playing god.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
I can see the ads now.Ddrak wrote:If they are going to be revived, then they won't be in heaven/hell because they aren't properly dead yet.
Dd
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Well, it’s the Super-Monroe Doctrine: “Get off our oil, people who dress funny!” - M. Bouffant
"You're a bad captain, Zarde. People like you only learn by being touched, and hard. And you will greatly disapprove of where these men put their hands." - M. Vanderbeam.
"You're a bad captain, Zarde. People like you only learn by being touched, and hard. And you will greatly disapprove of where these men put their hands." - M. Vanderbeam.
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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
I wonder if the idea of consciousness and existence = the result of complex organic receptionary systems operating ONLY during what we know as 'life' and ending when biological functions ceased -- ever crossed anyones mind?
What happens to the frog that can freeze itself all season and suddenly thaw out and revive itself in the spring? Does it ascend to some sort of fantasy world in another form for a 4 month vacation, then get suddenly ripped across the cosmos and back into its body?
Oh ya - monkey that got tortured by other monkies said froggies have no souls.
Poor froggies. They need spiritual vacations.
What happens to the frog that can freeze itself all season and suddenly thaw out and revive itself in the spring? Does it ascend to some sort of fantasy world in another form for a 4 month vacation, then get suddenly ripped across the cosmos and back into its body?
Oh ya - monkey that got tortured by other monkies said froggies have no souls.
Poor froggies. They need spiritual vacations.

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Re: A Conversation about cyronics
Klast got checkmated by Rsak.Rsak wrote:How is this any different from resuscitating someone who is dead via CPR and shock paddles? If there is no waiting then we are already playing God and there still isn't a horrible outcry from most Christians.So pulling someone out of heaven, or especially out of hell for another go around might be considered playing god.
Oh, the humanity....
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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