Preservation and revival is possible, but not for the current technology of preservation. Everyone in Alcor’s tanks right now is irretrievably dead. The gamble was worth making at the time, but it didn’t pay off.
The bodies may be useful for their genetic information, especially from their gut biota.
I remember a poem that appeared in one of the science fiction magazines a long time ago, the gist of which was:
“Here are some diseases you may have forgotten about. I’m sorry I had nothing to wrap them in but the body of this old man. Yours, DEATH.”
Preservation and revival is possible, but not for the current technology of preservation. Everyone in Alcor’s tanks right now is irretrievably dead. The gamble was worth making at the time, but it didn’t pay off.
The bodies may be useful for their genetic information, especially from their gut biota.
I remember a poem that appeared in one of the science fiction magazines a long time ago, the gist of which was:
“Here are some diseases you may have forgotten about. I’m sorry I had nothing to wrap them in but the body of this old man. Yours, DEATH.”
Hmm, this seems like it’s not a cryonics-works-for-you scenario, and I did mean to exclude this type of example, though maybe not super clearly:
OP: There’s a separate question of whether the outcome is positive enough to be worth the money, which I’d rather discuss in a different thread.