Which are you signed up for, or which are you planning to sign up for? There are certain benefits to either choice, Neuropreservation or Full Body preservation, or so it seems. If you feel strongly about one way or the other, please state why.
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Posted 11 August 2006 - 06:33 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 07:05 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 07:26 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 07:30 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 07:35 PM
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Posted 11 August 2006 - 10:25 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:06 PM
$50/mth
Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:18 PM
[lol]hmm cable or backing up my brain...?
Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:21 PM
Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:23 PM
Posted 12 August 2006 - 12:54 AM
The mind is what important. The body is nothing more than a box that maintains it...
Posted 12 August 2006 - 01:47 AM
I'll toss this out here until someone more knowledgeable comes along and sets me straight.want to know what prevents a combination of the best of both types from being offered?
Posted 12 August 2006 - 09:13 AM
Posted 12 August 2006 - 09:48 AM
With the neuro-preservation, all the attention goes into the head. With the whole body preservation, it's much more difficult to vitrify the entire body, as it takes much longer (due to size, limited blood flow to various tissues/organs, etc.). With blood/cryoprotectant circulating through the whole body, it'd be difficult for the brain to get too far ahead of the body, in terms of temperature, unless two separate blood flows were maintained (which the body wasn't really designed for: there's only one aorta).
Posted 12 August 2006 - 04:11 PM
Yes, I think some people have done this as well, paid for a neurosuspension and a full body suspension, and then have the body as well as the head in seperate dewars. I would think there would be certain advantages to this if someone had enough money to do so.Just speculating, but couldn't you instead preserve the brain and body separately and thereby avoid these technical difficulties (if cost isn't a factor).
Journalists and horror novelists invariably have a field day with 'frozen severed heads', and focus not on the scientific or humanitarian sense of cryonics, but on making cryonics look grotesque or ridiculous. Why ask for such trouble - trouble that can put a patient at risk?
Posted 14 August 2006 - 05:29 PM
Posted 14 August 2006 - 06:36 PM
Posted 14 August 2006 - 07:25 PM
Posted 16 August 2006 - 10:58 PM
Posted 17 August 2006 - 05:09 AM
This comparison is made often. Even Ralph Merkle still uses it in his cryonics talks. The problem with it is that it makes no allowance for the technology used to do cryonics. As extreme examples, consider permafrost interment, which has a probability of success of ZERO, and demonstrably reversible brain cryopreservation, which has a probability of success of ONE. There is a vast difference between all possible "might works" in between. If there is to be progress in the field, a more discerning perspective of the odds and how to improve them is needed rather than simply "better to be frozen than not."Frankly I see cryo as no more (or less) valid than Pascal's wager.
By "cranial cryo" (not a recognized term) I assume you mean neuropreservation, which is preservation of the brain within the head. Preservation of the head is incidental to the goal of brain preservation, which is best done without removing the brain from its protective enclosure.For cryo to have an increased chance of success I think the whole body method improves the odds because cranial cryo depends too much on specifically advanced nanotech, and logically dependent processes that we are only hypothesizing about today.
Ahem (coughs, clears throat). "Corpse" is a very offensive word in cryonics because the imagery it conjurs up is antithetical to the practice and purposes of cryonics, which is preservation of life. The label is unjustified until a proper determination of the survival status of individual cryonics patients is eventually made. Yes, even in cryonics there is "political correctness".Probably not but rebuilding a broken yet relatively complete corpse...
This is probably the best argument against neuropreservation; the regrown body might feel different, and lack certain learned motor skills. In response to this concern, it might be noted that a *really* advanced technology (the kind of technology that would be required for uploading) could theoretically analyze brain memory patterns to infer what body characteristics and neural connectivity wouldn't feel different. But that would be a very high level analysis of brain contents, and require more fine control over the regeneration process than discussed above.Probably not but rebuilding a broken yet relatively complete (body) and ALSO returning the *personality* (memory character) of the body are two different problems predicated on having an accurate map of the original inhabitant of the body in the first place.
Posted 17 August 2006 - 02:52 PM
Permafrost burial should be the final stage in a process that begins with good chemical preservation of the brain, possibly dehydration and an attempt to minimize exposure to oxygen (which could be something as simple as covering the person with waxy petroleum jelly). Under these circumstances I would not say permafrost has a zero probability of success, although other methods of preservation will nonetheless be associated with less injury and deterioration.As extreme examples, consider permafrost interment, which has a probability of success of ZERO
I think a good argument against neuropreservation at present is the fact that the body may have many clues about a person's personal history which could assist in reconstructing the personality. The strongest argument against neuropreservation at CI is the political environment (within CI and within society). On the other hand, I have long favored preserving the body and head separately (although this is not feasible in the current political environment). Until we come close to the time where reversible whole body cryopreservation is within sight, perfusing a whole body will necessarily compromise the quality of perfusion of the brain. I think that the brain should be the main objective. In that sense, CI procedures amount to a neuropreservation to the extent that our initial perfusion with vitrification mixture concentrates on the brain (even though the body remains attached and may subsequently be perfused with etylene glycol).This is probably the best argument against neuropreservation; the regrown body might feel different, and lack certain learned motor skills.
Posted 17 August 2006 - 03:19 PM
The mind is what important. The body is nothing more than a box that maintains it...
-Infernity
Posted 17 August 2006 - 04:39 PM
Surely you mean this in the same low-order sense of preserving photo albums or personal belongings. Usually when we refer to preservation or reconstruction of "personality" in cryonics, we mean personality in the deep sense of personal identity. Losing my body in some traumatic accident would change my personality by making me grumpy and depressed (to put it mildly), but not my personal identity. If I became a quadriplegic tomorrow, I'd still be me. Even if I got a crude Robert White-style body transplant, I'd still be me. Conversely, the existence of my body after destruction of my brain would not be the least bit useful in reconstructing my mind.I think a good argument against neuropreservation at present is the fact that the body may have many clues about a person's personal history which could assist in reconstructing the personality.
Posted 17 August 2006 - 11:04 PM
Ben wrote:
Surely you mean this in the same low-order sense of preserving photo albums or personal belongings. Usually when we refer to preservation or reconstruction of "personality" in cryonics, we mean personality in the deep sense of personal identity. Losing my body in some traumatic accident would change my personality by making me grumpy and depressed (to put it mildly), but not my personal identity. If I became a quadriplegic tomorrow, I'd still be me. Even if I got a crude Robert White-style body transplant, I'd still be me. Conversely, the existence of my body after destruction of my brain would not be the least bit useful in reconstructing my mind.I think a good argument against neuropreservation at present is the fact that the body may have many clues about a person's personal history which could assist in reconstructing the personality.
Posted 17 August 2006 - 11:10 PM
Bear in mind, a person's very lifestyle may affect this to some degree. Athletes, or even just athletic people (e.g., a scientist who plays tennis on the weekends or whatever), will probably have a lot of their memories, skills, emotions, etc., tied up in physical things, and the reflexes and other aspects of the nervous system beyond the base of the brain stem would need to be preserved to capture much of that.I am not implying that the body contains consciousness. But I think that the record of life experiences that could be gained by studying the body would be much, much more instructive than what could be gained by studying photo albums. Even if not, it would be a very different kind of recording of experiences than photo albums, and valuable for the different insights it would offer.
Posted 17 August 2006 - 11:14 PM
Posted 18 August 2006 - 03:58 AM
Posted 23 August 2006 - 10:27 AM
Posted 23 August 2006 - 01:07 PM
Well, I am sure others know much more about this than I, but I think thatI guess what I don't understand here is when is cyronics applied? I thought that death almost immediately results once blood stops flowing to the brain. So if you collapse at the shopping mall, how can you be saved in time before your brain goes permanently and irreversibly dead?
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