Article Text
Abstract
Cryonics is the low temperature preservation of people who can no longer be sustained by contemporary medicine in the hope that future medicine will make it possible to revive them and restore their health. A speculative practice at the outer edge of science, cryonics is often viewed with suspicion. In this paper I defend two theses. I first argue that there is a small, yet non-negligible, chance that cryonics is technically feasible. I make the case for this by reference to what we know about death and cryobiology, and what we can expect of future nanorobotics. I further argue that insofar as the alternatives to cryonics are burial or cremation, and thus certain, irreversible death, even small chances for success can be sufficient to make opting for cryonics a rational choice. Finally, I reply to five objections.
- Care of the Dying Patient
- Death
- Decision-making
- End-of-life
- Euthanasia
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Mourning the frozen: considering the relational implications of cryonics
- Ethics briefing
- Death becomes us
- Sixty seconds on . . . cryopreservation
- Science fiction authors’ perspectives on human genetic engineering
- Wealth, income, and health before and after retirement
- Gender-specific aspects related to type of fertility preservation strategies and access to fertility care
- Experimental study on the vitrification and xenotransplantation of human ovarian tissue
- Do wealth disparities contribute to health disparities within racial/ethnic groups?
- Feasibility of in vitro maturation of oocytes collected from patients with malignant ovarian tumors undergoing fertility preservation