Ideally, how people feel about things would be based in real-world consequences, and a chance of someone being not dead is usually strictly better than the alternative. But I can see how for a small enough chance of resurrection, it could possibly be outweighed by other people holding on to it.
I still hope that isn’t what’s going on in this case, though. That would require people to be feeling “I’d rather have this person permanently dead, because at least then I know where I stand.”
That would require people to be feeling “I’d rather have this person permanently dead, because at least then I know where I stand.”
That’s a pretty insulting way to put it. Consider an alternative: I’ll rather spend my only short life living it to the fullest than worrying about people, including me, who will very likely permanently die no matter what I do to help it.
In that case, the best solution would be to let the loved person freeze and then pretty much ignore them (i.e. spend only as much thought about them as we usually spend on dead people).
The problem I have imagining someone preventing their loved one to do cryonics to have closure is that they will die themselves with certainty anyways. Do they also wish they would die before their loved ones do, in the case of no cryonics?
It’s easier for me to imagine why they wouldn’t want to do cryonics themselves because of wanting closure.
Ideally, how people feel about things would be based in real-world consequences, and a chance of someone being not dead is usually strictly better than the alternative. But I can see how for a small enough chance of resurrection, it could possibly be outweighed by other people holding on to it. I still hope that isn’t what’s going on in this case, though. That would require people to be feeling “I’d rather have this person permanently dead, because at least then I know where I stand.”
That’s a pretty insulting way to put it. Consider an alternative: I’ll rather spend my only short life living it to the fullest than worrying about people, including me, who will very likely permanently die no matter what I do to help it.
In that case, the best solution would be to let the loved person freeze and then pretty much ignore them (i.e. spend only as much thought about them as we usually spend on dead people).
The problem I have imagining someone preventing their loved one to do cryonics to have closure is that they will die themselves with certainty anyways. Do they also wish they would die before their loved ones do, in the case of no cryonics?
It’s easier for me to imagine why they wouldn’t want to do cryonics themselves because of wanting closure.
Sure. But self-modifying to feel differently is hard.