start 0:01:04 / 0:37:33
The reality is most of this kind of ignore is that we go on to live and pretended we are not heading rapidly towards aging and death.. The very few, right now, seen on a percentage basis, are taking the extremely rational step of saying: Well, cryonics may not be a guarantee but is certainly the most rational scientifically valued thing I can do right now to perhaps 'beat the reaper'.
Part-ID 058 Shannon Vyff (Cryonicist, Immortality Institute Member)
start 0:01:34 /0:38:02
I have talked about that with the children. I mean.. sometimes when they are going to sleep, little kids like my five year old, he can just have an emotional reaction, he'll actually cry about, you know,: "I don't want to die", I mean he'll ask "just what is death?" and, I tell him what some of the world's religions think. I don't have the answer.
Part-ID 059 Kennita Watson (Cryonicist, Libertarian and Extropian)
start 0:01:55 / 0:38:24
I do have some relatives who don't understand. Some of my friends, not so much friends as acquaintances, work colluegues and so on, generally don't think.., if they don't think that living longer is better it is because they are looking forward to an afterlife that is going to be better. And I'm not going to say for sure that there isn't one but I do not know for sure that there is and I know that there is this life cause I am living it.
Part-ID 060 Sonia Arrison
start 0:02:28 / 0:38:58
Oh, that's a hard question to answer, you know, sometimes, I am a researcher and pretty everything I do is based on facts for any of kind of prediction I make is based on what I've seeing. I don't know that we can say anything about what happens after death cause no one know. We can't go there and look and you can’t go and see that there is nothing. And you can’t go and see that there is something. So, you know, given that we don't know I just tend to, tend to not think about it very much. .., my induced think is.. an interesting question comes up, as if, you know, if we can live forever what does that say about god, what does that say about our conception of god. Does god exist?, you know, are we .., are we gods simply now?
Part-ID 061 James Dale
start 0:03:20 / 0:39:50
Well, there is no evidence that, you know, we actually, our consciousness exists after we die, so, I think that people that say that.. or people that object that notion are in some kind of a denial, that's the reality of the situation and if you look at it objectively, you know, there really is no evidence of any existence outside of this one.
Part-ID 062 William Faloon
start 0:03:53 / 0:40:23
Well, I personally don't believe there there is anything after death either, so I have a significant motivation to make life extension a reality. I have a lot of motivation to keep myself very healthy. I personally take over a hundred different supplements a day, of: drugs, vitamins, hormons, whatever I am able to uncover in the scientific literature that looks like it will extend my life span, I personally take it, and I write about it and publish in our magazine and many of our members want to follow the same direction that I and our scientific advisory board is doing.
Part-ID 063 James Halperin (Author: The First Immortal)
start 0:04:25 / 0:40:55
Because most of us have been brought up .. under fairly religious backgrounds, fairly religious teachings and, and.. we tend to conform, we are wired to conform, and this is a really great instance where you are much better off thinking for yourself if you can and trying to ignore what you have been taught.
Part-ID 064 Joao Pedro de Magalhaes, Ph.D.
start 0:04:59 / 0:41:28
I do not know about other people, but I think if I die, that's it for me, when it happens.
Part-ID 065 David Kekich
start 0:05:07 / 0:41:37
I.. I answer it by saying I just don't know and nobody knows, nobody. And nobody knows there is an afterlife, and nobody knows there is not an afterlife. If I had a bet on and I say there is there is no afterlife. And I am betting on it, I am putting my heart so into aging research because I won't hang around I don't want to take a chance. I will be happily surprised if there is was one if I die, you know, but nobody really knows that, and that's it.
Part-ID 066 Martine Rothblatt, Ph.D.
start 0:05:35 / 0:42:04
Obviously if there, there.. I think actually I would say that there - I take that back a little bit - I'd say if there is an entity that's gonna take care of us after death, that entity is us, that’s the collective activities of all of us people which is our collective consciousness and and our will to build an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent entity which is our collective technology and our collective consciousness.
And that entity is by definition god, so I’d say that god will be there when we become god.
Part-ID 067 Rafal Smigrodzki, M.D., Ph.D.
start 0:06:09 / 0:42:38
I personally think that once you, once you're dead it's over. I do not subscribe to any of these stories about afterlife. I think it's not impossible, but there is no evidence, no evidence that would convince me, that.. convince??? to leave the course. I do not believe in the existence of a soul, I don't think that after the destruction of the brain there is anything left of my memories, on myself. And of course I wouldn't want to find out,.. Or perhaps this is not the right way of saying that. .. The only way to find out what happens is, if you die and.. and if it turns out that there is nothing going on than you don't really find it out, right? So this is something that I would like to avoid. I would prefer not to even know. Stay alive and avoid the risk of.. of there'll be nothing left.
Part-ID 068 Max More, Ph.D.
start 0:07:23 / 0:43:53
There is an interesting dichotomy in almost everybody in this country and in this world: Either they believe that when they die they're defenetely going to somewhere and almost suddenly there is a pretty good place to go to, you know, many people were convinced they're going to the bad places, so that's ok, they are comfortable with that ideas, and they can deal with death. Or they want to be absolutely sure they'll live forever on earth. It is quite difficult to be a rational transhumanist and say: Well, I have a really good shot of living indefenetely, but I may not make it, I'll make it squash tomorrow in a car accident. I may not make it. That’s a pretty uncomfortable position. And I think people like Hurlbut and Kass they build the whole worldview on this idea of death beeing inhabitable and necessary and, my goodness, if it's not, what a disaster that means for all of history before now, it just would be a terrible thing.
And what if I don't make it, what a terrible thing! And if that limit is taken away, we are not mortal any more, what am I going to do with my life? What does that all mean? And they don't want to deal with those issues and so it rather just say it can't happen and it's bad if it did.
Edited by Matthias, 05 August 2007 - 08:03 PM.