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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!paperboy.osf.org!think.com!spdcc!das-news.harvard.edu!honeydew.srv.cs.cmu.edu!tsf
- From: tsf+@cs.cmu.edu (Timothy Freeman)
- Subject: Cryonics FAQ 1: Index
- Message-ID: <part1_765189408@cs.cmu.edu>
- Followup-To: sci.cryonics
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions
- and their answers about cryonics, the practice of carefully preserving
- very recently clinically and legally dead people in hopes that they can be
- revived in the future. It should be read by anyone interested in posting
- to sci.cryonics and by anyone who finds the prospect of certain death
- irritating.
- Sender: news@cs.cmu.edu (Usenet News System)
- Supersedes: <part1_762511006@cs.cmu.edu>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: u.ergo.cs.cmu.edu
- Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 08:37:02 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Sun, 15 May 1994 08:36:48 GMT
- Lines: 184
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu sci.cryonics:939 news.answers:17121 sci.answers:1031
-
- Archive-name: cryonics-faq/part1
-
- Cryonics
- Frequently Asked Question List
- Section 1: Introduction and Index
- Last Modified Tue Mar 22 13:27:08 1994
-
- Copyright 1993 by Tim Freeman. See the end of Section 1 for
- restrictions on redistribution.
-
- Cryonic suspension is an experimental procedure whereby patients who
- can no longer be kept alive with today's medical abilities are
- preserved at low temperatures for treatment in the future.
-
- Send comments about this list to Tim Freeman (tsf@cs.cmu.edu). The
- words "I" and "me" in these answers refer to opinions of Tim Freeman,
- which may or may not be shared by others.
-
- There is much information available as cryomsg's. You can fetch
- cryomsg "n" by sending mail to kqb@whscad1.att.com or to
- kevin.q.brown@att.com with the subject line "CRYOMSG n". You can get
- a current version of this entire FAQ list by fetching cryomsg "0018".
- You can get a current version of section "n" of this FAQ list by
- fetching cryomsg "0018.n". Also, all cryomsg's referenced in this FAQ
- (and a few others) are available by anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.cmu.edu,
- directory "/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/tsf/Public-Mail/cryonics/archive".
- You will need to give the entire directory path at once to FTP, rather
- than the commands "cd /afs" "cd cs.cmu.edu" and so forth, because the
- directories at the beginning of the path are protected from anonymous FTP
- access. There is more about this in the answer to question 8-2.
-
- Many FAQs, including this one, are available via anonymous FTP from
- rtfm.mit.edu in the directory "pub/usenet/news.answers". When a FAQ is
- presented as a netnews post, the filename for it on rtfm appears in
- the Archive-name line at the top of the post. The parts of this FAQ
- are archived as "cryonics-faq/part*.Z".
-
- Readers with access to NCSA Mosaic or other World Wide Web browsers will be
- able to read the hypertext version of this FAQ. The initial URL to
- start with is
- "file://ftp.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/tsf/Public-Mail/cryonics/html/overview.html".
-
- In this list, the acronym "CRFT" stands for "Cryonics: Reaching for
- Tomorrow", which is available from Alcor. The address of Alcor is
- part of the answer to Question 6-4.
-
- Much more is said about Alcor than any other cryonics organization
- in this list. There are several reasons for this. First, Alcor is
- the largest, and it gets the most attention. Second, I am an
- Alcor member, and most of the reference material I have on hand was
- written by Alcor. I invite people more familiar with other
- organizations to contribute answers to these questions.
-
- This FAQ list needs a new maintainer. Cryomsg 1242 describes what the
- new maintainer would need to do to take over the job. If you are
- interested, send me mail.
-
- This FAQ list would also benefit from a detailed comparison of the
- various cryonics organizations. My thoughts about what could go into
- this are in cryomsg 1241. If you want to volunteer to write this
- answer, send me mail.
-
- This FAQ list has these sections:
-
- 1. Introduction and Index
- 2. Science/Technology -- Is cryonics feasible?
- 3. Philosophy/Religion -- Is cryonics good?
- 4. Controversy surrounding Cryonics -- Dora Kent, Cryobiologists, Donaldson
- 5. Neurosuspension -- Whether to take your body with you.
- 6. Suspension Arrangements -- The organizations that exist.
- 7. Cost of Cryonics -- Why does cryonics cost so much?
- 8. Communications -- How to find out more.
- 9. Glossary & Acknowledgements -- Important and unimportant jargon.
-
- The following questions are covered. Questions marked with a "*"
- are not yet answered.
-
- 2. Science/Technology
- 2-1. Has anyone been successfully revived from cryonic suspension?
- 2-2. What advances need to be made before people frozen now have a chance
- of being revived?
- 2-3. Is there any government or university supported research on cryonics
- specifically?
- 2-4. What is the procedure for freezing people?
- 2-5. How can one get a more detailed account of a suspension?
- 2-6. Is there damage from oxygen deprivation during a suspension?
- 2-7. Do memories require an ongoing metabolism to support them, like RAM in
- a computer?
- 2-8. If these frozen people are revived, will it be easy to cure them of
- whatever disease made them clinically die?
- 2-9. If I'm frozen and then successfully revived, will my body be old?
- 2-10. Why is freezing in liquid nitrogen better than other kinds of
- preservation, such as drying or embalming?
- 2-11. What is vitrification?
- 2-12. How is the baboon? Did it live? Any brain damage?
- 2-13. Who has successfully kept dogs cold for hours? Did they survive? Any
- brain damage?
- 2-14. Who froze the roundworms? What happened?
- 2-15. What were the circumstances under which cat brains produced
- normal-looking brain waves after being frozen?
- 2-16. Would it be possible to use some improvement on modern CAT or MRI
- scanners to infer enough about the structure of a brain to reconstruct
- the memories and personality?
- 2-17. Does background radiation cause significant damage to suspendees?
-
- 3. Philosophy/Religion
- 3-1. Are the frozen people dead?
- 3-2. Is cryonics suicide?
- 3-3. What about overpopulation?
- 3-4. When are two people the same person?
- 3-5. What if they repair the freezing damage (and install a new body, in
- the case of neurosuspension), and the resulting being acts and talks
- as though it were me, but it isn't really me?
- 3-6. What would happen if people didn't age after reaching adulthood?
- 3-7. Would it be better to be suspended now or later?
- 3-8. Why would anyone be revived?
- 3-9. Is there a conflict between cryonics and religious beliefs?
- 3-10. Is attempting to extend life consistent with Christianity?
-
- 4. Controversy surrounding Cryonics
- 4-1. Why do cryobiologists have such a low opinion of cryonics? How did this
- start, and how does it continue?
- 4-2. Who made the statement about reviving a frozen person being similar to
- reconstructing the cow from hamburger?
- 4-3. What was the Dora Kent case?
- 4-4. What about that fellow in the news with the brain tumor?
-
- 5. Neurosuspension
- 5-1. What are the pros and cons of neurosuspension (only freezing the head)?
- 5-2. How many people have chosen neurosuspension over whole-body
- suspension? (This question has only a partial answer.)
-
- 6. Suspension Arrangements
- 6-1. How many people are frozen right now?
- 6-2. How is suspension paid for?
- 6-3. How will reanimation be paid for?
- 6-4. What suspension organizations are available?
- 6-5. How can I get financial statements for the various organizations to
- evaluate their stability?
- 6-6. How hard will these people work to freeze me?
- 6-7. What obligations do the suspension organizations have to the people
- they have suspended? Will they pay for revival and rehabilitation?
- 6-8. How long has this been going on?
- 6-9. How much of the resources of the cryonics organizations are reserved
- for reviving patients?
- 6-10. How can uncooperative relatives derail suspensions?
- 6-11. How should I deal with relatives who will not cooperate with my
- suspension arrangements?
- 6-12. What if my spouse does not approve of my suspension
- arrangements?
- 6-13. What practical things can I do to increase my chances
- of being suspended well?
- 6-14. How can I pay for my own revival and rehabilitation, and keep some of
- my financial assets after revival?
- 6-15. Is Walt Disney frozen?
-
- 7. Cost of Cryonics
- 7-1. Why does cryonics cost so much?
- 7-2. Is anyone getting rich from cryonics? What are the salaries at these
- organizations like?
- 7-3. *How do cryonics organizations invest their money to last for the long
- term?
-
- 8. Communications
- 8-1. How can I get more information?
- 8-2. What is a cryomsg? How do I fetch one?
-
-
- Copyright 1993 by Tim Freeman
-
- You may freely distribute unmodified copies of this entire FAQ list,
- provided that you do not work for any cryonics organization or
- suspension services provider.
-
- You may also distribute modified copies of this FAQ list, provided
- that you also do the following:
-
- 1) Include instructions saying how to get a current copy of the full
- FAQ list.
-
- 2) If you use text from this FAQ that is attributed as a direct quote
- from another source, get permission from the author of the other
- source before you use their text.
-
-