If I wanted to play the devil’s advocate, i would point out two issues with this:
Most of the people in your example seem to be very rich. For such a very rich person the costs might be as insignificant as the cost of buying a beer might be for me. This means, if it turned out to be a scam, they wouldn’t lose almost anything. I, on the other hand, might lose a significant portion of my net worth, which might have had a better use in the hands of my family than in the hands of a fraudster.
There are famous celebrities who join a certain very infamous cult disguising itself as a religion, whose name I don’t mention because that might be enough for them to sue me. Of course, most of those celebrities are no scientists or engineers, so this point can be weak against your list of examples.
If everyone outside of cryonics thinks of it as a rich man’s indulgence, then why haven’t adventuresses showed up? In the real world, cryonics acts like “female Kryptonite.”
If I wanted to play the devil’s advocate, i would point out two issues with this:
Most of the people in your example seem to be very rich. For such a very rich person the costs might be as insignificant as the cost of buying a beer might be for me. This means, if it turned out to be a scam, they wouldn’t lose almost anything. I, on the other hand, might lose a significant portion of my net worth, which might have had a better use in the hands of my family than in the hands of a fraudster.
There are famous celebrities who join a certain very infamous cult disguising itself as a religion, whose name I don’t mention because that might be enough for them to sue me. Of course, most of those celebrities are no scientists or engineers, so this point can be weak against your list of examples.
If everyone outside of cryonics thinks of it as a rich man’s indulgence, then why haven’t adventuresses showed up? In the real world, cryonics acts like “female Kryptonite.”