if these people object to cryonics because they see it as selfish (for example), why do so many of them come up with fake objections?
I—quite predictably—think this is a special case of the more general problem that people have trouble explaining themselves. You mom doesn’t give her real reason because she can’t (yet) articulate it. In your case, I think it’s due to two factors: 1) part of the reasoning process is something she doesn’t want to say to your face so she avoids thinking it, and 2) she’s using hidden assumptions that she falsely assumes you share.
For my part, my dad’s wife is nominally unopposed, bitterly noting that “It’s your money” and then ominously adding that, “you’ll have to talk about this with your future wife, who may find it loopy”.
(Joke’s on her—at this rate, no woman will take that job!)
Sometime ago I offered this explanation for not signing up for cryo: I know signing up would be rational, but can’t overcome my brain’s desire to make me “look normal”. I wonder whether that explanation sounds true to others here, and how many other people feel the same way.
I’m in a typical decision-paralysis state. I want to sign up, I have the money, but I’m also interested in infinite banking, which requires you to get a whole-life plan [1], which would have to be coordinated, which makes it complicated and throws off an ugh field.
What I should probably do is just get the term insurance, sign up for cryo, and then buy amendments to the life insurance contract if I want to get into the infinite banking thing.
[1] Save your breath about the “buy term and invest the difference” spiel, I’ve heard it all before. The investment environment is a joke.
I’m also interested in infinite banking, which requires you to get a whole-life plan
You mentioned this before and I had a quick look at the website and got the impression that it is fairly heavily dependent on US tax laws around whole life insurance and so is not very applicable to other countries. Have you investigated it enough to say whether my impression is accurate or if this is something that makes sense in other countries with differing tax regimes as well?
I haven’t read about the laws in other countries, but I suspect they at least share the aspect that it’s harder to seize assets stored in such a plan, giving you more time to lodge an objection of they get a lien on it.
For a variety of reasons I don’t think cryonics is a good investment for me personally. The social cost of looking weird is certainly a negative factor, though not the only one.
I—quite predictably—think this is a special case of the more general problem that people have trouble explaining themselves. You mom doesn’t give her real reason because she can’t (yet) articulate it. In your case, I think it’s due to two factors: 1) part of the reasoning process is something she doesn’t want to say to your face so she avoids thinking it, and 2) she’s using hidden assumptions that she falsely assumes you share.
For my part, my dad’s wife is nominally unopposed, bitterly noting that “It’s your money” and then ominously adding that, “you’ll have to talk about this with your future wife, who may find it loopy”.
(Joke’s on her—at this rate, no woman will take that job!)
Sometime ago I offered this explanation for not signing up for cryo: I know signing up would be rational, but can’t overcome my brain’s desire to make me “look normal”. I wonder whether that explanation sounds true to others here, and how many other people feel the same way.
I’m in a typical decision-paralysis state. I want to sign up, I have the money, but I’m also interested in infinite banking, which requires you to get a whole-life plan [1], which would have to be coordinated, which makes it complicated and throws off an ugh field.
What I should probably do is just get the term insurance, sign up for cryo, and then buy amendments to the life insurance contract if I want to get into the infinite banking thing.
[1] Save your breath about the “buy term and invest the difference” spiel, I’ve heard it all before. The investment environment is a joke.
You mentioned this before and I had a quick look at the website and got the impression that it is fairly heavily dependent on US tax laws around whole life insurance and so is not very applicable to other countries. Have you investigated it enough to say whether my impression is accurate or if this is something that makes sense in other countries with differing tax regimes as well?
I haven’t read about the laws in other countries, but I suspect they at least share the aspect that it’s harder to seize assets stored in such a plan, giving you more time to lodge an objection of they get a lien on it.
For a variety of reasons I don’t think cryonics is a good investment for me personally. The social cost of looking weird is certainly a negative factor, though not the only one.