
Ever since I learned that people eventually died, I have had this fear of death churning away in the background. As a child I was always thinking 鈥渋sn鈥檛 there something we can do about this?鈥
I considered cryopreservation for many years and then signed up as a neuro聽鈥 which means I鈥檒l only have my head preserved聽鈥 in 2007. It made perfect sense to me that the mind arises as an emergent property of the brain and that it might be possible to preserve that.
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I don鈥檛 know whether it will be possible to bring someone back because it鈥檚 hard to know what kind of repair work you would have to do to correct any deterioration. Is it a case of engineering viruses or blood cells that are available now, or using nanomachines to move atoms around in order to fix clinically dead brains? Or will it need technology that isn鈥檛 even close to existing right now? Our brains might even just be scanned into a computer at a molecular level and made up of algorithms. We just can鈥檛 predict what will happen, but I see it primarily as an engineering problem.
So I don鈥檛 think of how it might work, but of what kind of values might be around at the time. I鈥檇 like to live in a much more open society聽鈥 a place where everyone is accepted.
When you sign up it鈥檚 a bit like donating your body to science. There鈥檚 a fair bit of legal paperwork and the finances to sort out. I pay for mine through a life insurance policy that pays Alcor Life Extension Foundation upon my death. It鈥檚 about 拢50 a month.
I discussed it with my wife for several years, but didn鈥檛 tell anyone else until I鈥檇 signed up. My parents and siblings realise I鈥檓 not a crazy person, so they鈥檙e generally supportive. But it is really hard for a lot of people to understand; you鈥檙e asking them to completely overturn their views of the finality of death. If you believe, for religious or philosophical reasons, that the self is something other than an emergent property of the architecture of the brain, then cryonics makes no sense at all.
I don鈥檛 think we should rest on our laurels and be satisfied with our lot. How do we know that we should be happy with this amount of life? We should keep on being curious, keep a childlike mindset where we鈥檙e always probing away at things we don鈥檛 understand and taking joy in experimentation. Imagine the regret in the future if this is something that works out and we realise we鈥檝e got all these people that we鈥檝e lost that we could have saved?
I don鈥檛 agree with people who say it鈥檚 unethical. Where鈥檚 the wisdom in losing the accrued knowledge of someone who鈥檚 lived for decades? I think death is a terrible, terrible thing. Giving yourself the option, however minute, of keeping hold of all that knowledge and experience is surely the responsible thing to do.鈥