With 1): This may be an obvious problem, but if the singularity for instance occurs thousands of years in the future, then whatever language you write your “do not revive” order in, the future civilization may not be able to understand it and therefore might not necessarily respect your wishes.
With 3) Perhaps if future civilizations who were not interested in revival for its own sake (why would we want another person from so-many-years ago?) would only revive when there is a substantial depopulation crisis (e.g after nuclear war, asteroid strike etc.). If so, these conditions are unlikely to be very pleasant. However, one could argue that in those cases you have a moral imperative to stay alive and reproduce and not commit suicide, because if the crisis is temporary, then all the future utilions of your possible descendants are lost and the human species as a whole is more likely to die out.
With 1): This may be an obvious problem, but if the singularity for instance occurs thousands of years in the future, then whatever language you write your “do not revive” order in, the future civilization may not be able to understand it and therefore might not necessarily respect your wishes.
With 3) Perhaps if future civilizations who were not interested in revival for its own sake (why would we want another person from so-many-years ago?) would only revive when there is a substantial depopulation crisis (e.g after nuclear war, asteroid strike etc.). If so, these conditions are unlikely to be very pleasant. However, one could argue that in those cases you have a moral imperative to stay alive and reproduce and not commit suicide, because if the crisis is temporary, then all the future utilions of your possible descendants are lost and the human species as a whole is more likely to die out.