I think he raised a very valid concern. Also, cost is a very important dimension in terms of technological development. If money were not an issue, I have little doubt that we would have seen manned missions to Mars and several asteroids. However, money is very much an issue.
Why will so much go into recovering brains when new ones are so damn cheap?
I’m not disputing that it’s a valid concern, I’m trying to focus on one particular question in the discussion rather than just opening another general discussion on the subject of cryonics.
No, I wouldn’t consider this to be on-topic, sorry. I’d like to stay focussed on technical feasibility and the arguments raised in the article.
I think he raised a very valid concern. Also, cost is a very important dimension in terms of technological development. If money were not an issue, I have little doubt that we would have seen manned missions to Mars and several asteroids. However, money is very much an issue.
Why will so much go into recovering brains when new ones are so damn cheap?
I’m not disputing that it’s a valid concern, I’m trying to focus on one particular question in the discussion rather than just opening another general discussion on the subject of cryonics.