Immortal beloved
I must be completely honest, I didn't like the idea. Things like this are the antithesis of the idea of e contrario and of critical thinking (never mind the fact that this friend is extremely intelligent). I didn't like it because there's little evidence that cryogenics is an effective way of preserving tissue over a long period of time, because many people by the time they die have not only their bodies but their brains deeply affected, because it is unclear that brain reconstruction would not result in dramatic personality changes and the loss of "I". In other words the person coming out of cryogenic stasis may not be the person that went into it. I did not like the fact that the companies providing this service (see links below) have rather questionable credibility and look like something advertised in infomertials at 2:00 AM. I didn't like the "but what if" marketing strategy (no, we can not answer any of these questions, but what if somehow all of these unlikely things work themselves out and it's only $1200 per year).
Yet that is not what prompted me to write this blog. The idea of immortality is pervasive in human lore. Most of our gods are immortal. We've been searching for the elixir of eternal life and the fountain of youth. Lonesome sells a rejuvenate eye cream (from Latin iuvenis - young).
So how do we envision immortality and what would we do with it if we had it? Do we honestly think that science will find a way to stop all aging processes? Or even reverse them? Will we have a "dial an age" machine that will freeze frame us at any age we chose? Or will it be a biobot imbued with our personality? And if so, will our new vessels affect our thinking and our personality and also lead to loss of the original "I"? And will it have a full range of sensory inputs that define our existence? Will we be able to enjoy duck confit with a prefect glass of Pinot or a kiss of a loved one or affection of a dog? And if not that, then what? And where would we find energy and food to sustain us all? And will immortality be only for the rich?
And another thing... How much of what we do and how we live is driven by the realization of inevitability of our death? How would human behavior and society change without the fear of it? Will we become even more reckless and self-destructive than we already are?
I guess my problem with immortality is similar to my problem with the religious concept of afterlife. If this never ends, then there's an infinite number of second chances, then there's no reason to get out of bed and accomplish anything today because you can always accomplish it tomorrow...or in a hundred years. Qualities like drive, ambition, competitiveness, may simply disappear. How can one win a race that never ends?
As it is, people watch more TV and engage in other "inactivities" than ever before. Basic necessities of food and entertainment have become cheap and easily accessible. With more people having too much time for entertainment and not enough artists motivated to create it, I can envision a future with an infinite number of bioborgs plugged into the superweb endlessly watching direct server to brain feeds of re-runs of Sex in the City.
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Cryonics Institute
Alcor
