Here’s a good opportunity to test your motivations. Think about the rationale you currently harbor for cryonics. Think specifically about which of the doubts you currently harbor, if any, would need to be settled before parting with your money. Roughly how much time and energy would you devote to this?
Once you’ve done this, read this comment on OB (if you’ve done so already, my comment is probably a waste). The issue isn’t so much the accuracy of those claims, but the nature of them. Did you have a good reason to believe that they’re handling their money wisely prior to being forced to consider it? Given the above exercise in settling your doubts, do you think you would have done the necessary homework to find out prior to signing up? If not, then I’d be inclined to treat that as evidence that your decision was at least partially the product of irrational persuasion.
Logi, this is a good illustration of the “rationalist” coordination failure mode where people demand that the group be perfect before joining, while disabling the natural human tendency to think the group is perfect. This is not like investing money in a hedge fund where there are hundreds of competing possibilities. Cryonics Institute or Alcor, pick one. CI, which is the only option I know, gives a pretty good impression of transparency (I could look up their cost of liquid nitrogen if I liked). But lack of the information you’re demanding just isn’t something that should stop you from signing up with Alcor or CI.
I’ll have to do a post about this at some point—“Join the Flawed Herd”.
This is not like investing money in a hedge fund where there are hundreds of competing possibilities. Cryonics Institute or Alcor, pick one.
That only holds if you assume there exists a viable cryonics option. When making a decision like this, an important question to ask is: “Am I being had?” I tend to think both organizations are probably legitimate, but their legitimacy or lack thereof is fundamental to the rationale behind signing up for cryonics in the first place, and not easily dismissed as a “flaw”.
But lack of the information you’re demanding just isn’t something that should stop you from signing up with Alcor or CI.
The above reservations aside, my point wasn’t really that it should stop you from signing up (hence “The issue isn’t so much the accuracy of those claims, but the nature of them”), my point is that it seems very rational to obtain that information in the course of evaluating your options, and if you can predict that you wouldn’t bother to do so, you’ve possibly identified an irrational operator acting on your decisions.
Here’s a good opportunity to test your motivations. Think about the rationale you currently harbor for cryonics. Think specifically about which of the doubts you currently harbor, if any, would need to be settled before parting with your money. Roughly how much time and energy would you devote to this?
Once you’ve done this, read this comment on OB (if you’ve done so already, my comment is probably a waste). The issue isn’t so much the accuracy of those claims, but the nature of them. Did you have a good reason to believe that they’re handling their money wisely prior to being forced to consider it? Given the above exercise in settling your doubts, do you think you would have done the necessary homework to find out prior to signing up? If not, then I’d be inclined to treat that as evidence that your decision was at least partially the product of irrational persuasion.
Logi, this is a good illustration of the “rationalist” coordination failure mode where people demand that the group be perfect before joining, while disabling the natural human tendency to think the group is perfect. This is not like investing money in a hedge fund where there are hundreds of competing possibilities. Cryonics Institute or Alcor, pick one. CI, which is the only option I know, gives a pretty good impression of transparency (I could look up their cost of liquid nitrogen if I liked). But lack of the information you’re demanding just isn’t something that should stop you from signing up with Alcor or CI.
I’ll have to do a post about this at some point—“Join the Flawed Herd”.
That only holds if you assume there exists a viable cryonics option. When making a decision like this, an important question to ask is: “Am I being had?” I tend to think both organizations are probably legitimate, but their legitimacy or lack thereof is fundamental to the rationale behind signing up for cryonics in the first place, and not easily dismissed as a “flaw”.
The above reservations aside, my point wasn’t really that it should stop you from signing up (hence “The issue isn’t so much the accuracy of those claims, but the nature of them”), my point is that it seems very rational to obtain that information in the course of evaluating your options, and if you can predict that you wouldn’t bother to do so, you’ve possibly identified an irrational operator acting on your decisions.