The expected value of an act is the sum of the products (utilities x probabilities).
To offset a difference in living 100 times as much longer (even not accounting for other utilities like quality of life), it takes 100 times the probability. I don’t think cryonics is 100 times less likely to work than a heart transplant.
So what? The value of winning the lottery is much higher than working for the next five years, but that doesn’t mean it has a higher expected utility.
The expected value of an act is the sum of the products (utilities x probabilities).
Unless you think a heart transplant is just as probable to work as cryonics, then you must consider more than simply the value of each act.
To offset a difference in living 100 times as much longer (even not accounting for other utilities like quality of life), it takes 100 times the probability. I don’t think cryonics is 100 times less likely to work than a heart transplant.