I spent time working in fatal car crash investigation (reading crash reports and doing engineering analysis, nothing as gory as you’re probably picturing), and car crashes often involved massive head trauma or would, at a minimum, require *hours* of lag time before the cryonics team could make it there. I’d say at a complete guess that only about 10% involved people dying in hospital later on (i.e. under circumstances that a cryo team could get to them in time to prepare the body).
My impression of the technology is that it’s too much in its infancy to be able to say with any sort of confidence that a body that had been left with minimal treatment for a good 8-10 hours would be in a good state for preservation. And my understanding is that after only a few minutes/hours the brain starts to really degrade.
This is a major reason I’m not considering yet. I also live in a country without a good cryo organisation, and the exchange rates make the fees for Alcor quite a lot when I am not convinced I’d get the value. I also think the 5% figure is way too high.
I mean admittedly, pascal’s wager comes into play a bit here, but I’m not convinced that my current jurisdiction is a good place to die and be cryopreserved, and I have no plans to move.
Why would injury prevent cryopreservation, unless it’s head injury?
I spent time working in fatal car crash investigation (reading crash reports and doing engineering analysis, nothing as gory as you’re probably picturing), and car crashes often involved massive head trauma or would, at a minimum, require *hours* of lag time before the cryonics team could make it there. I’d say at a complete guess that only about 10% involved people dying in hospital later on (i.e. under circumstances that a cryo team could get to them in time to prepare the body).
My impression of the technology is that it’s too much in its infancy to be able to say with any sort of confidence that a body that had been left with minimal treatment for a good 8-10 hours would be in a good state for preservation. And my understanding is that after only a few minutes/hours the brain starts to really degrade.
This is a major reason I’m not considering yet. I also live in a country without a good cryo organisation, and the exchange rates make the fees for Alcor quite a lot when I am not convinced I’d get the value. I also think the 5% figure is way too high.
I mean admittedly, pascal’s wager comes into play a bit here, but I’m not convinced that my current jurisdiction is a good place to die and be cryopreserved, and I have no plans to move.