I agree that $300, with no concomitant time investment, would probably not be enough.
I guess I’m just surprised that a (smart) person could read all of this information about a potentially hugely transformative technology, assign such a low probability (20%) to the likelihood that “not all of what makes you you is encoded in the physical state of the brain,” and still just generally not care much and prefer to go play music instead. I just don’t get it. Maybe I’m weird.
It seems unlikely to me that I can have a large effect on the probabilities; they will probably stay very small even if I put in a lot of work. So I think time spent on music will make me happier than time spent on cryonics.
I agree that $300, with no concomitant time investment, would probably not be enough.
I guess I’m just surprised that a (smart) person could read all of this information about a potentially hugely transformative technology, assign such a low probability (20%) to the likelihood that “not all of what makes you you is encoded in the physical state of the brain,” and still just generally not care much and prefer to go play music instead. I just don’t get it. Maybe I’m weird.
It seems unlikely to me that I can have a large effect on the probabilities; they will probably stay very small even if I put in a lot of work. So I think time spent on music will make me happier than time spent on cryonics.