“Hi, you have cancer. Want an experimental treatment? It works with >5% probability and costs $500/year.” “No thanks, I’ll die and give the money to charity.”
Strangely enough, I don’t hear that nearly as often as the one against cryonics. And it’s even worse, because signing up for cryonics means more people will be able to (economies of scale, looks less weird, more people hear of it).
Not to mention that most charities suck. But VillageReach does qualify.
“Hi, you have cancer. Want an experimental treatment? It works with >5% probability and costs $500/year.” “No thanks, I’ll die and give the money to charity.”
Strangely enough, I don’t hear that nearly as often as the one against cryonics. And it’s even worse, because signing up for cryonics means more people will be able to (economies of scale, looks less weird, more people hear of it).
Not to mention that most charities suck. But VillageReach does qualify.