I actually had a nightmare recently where I was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer and would have preferred not to go through treatment, but felt pressured by other, more aggressively anti-death members of the rationality community. Was afraid people would think I didn’t care about them if I didn’t try to stay alive longer to be with them, etc. (I’m an ICU nurse; I have a pretty good S1 handle on how horrific a lot of life saving treatments are, and how much quality of life it’s possible to lose.)
I’ve thought about cryonics, but haven’t made a decision either way; right now, my feeling is that I don’t have anything against the principle, but that it doesn’t seem likely enough to work for the cost-benefit analysis to come out positive.
Can you describe the reasons are that make you think it is not likely enough to work? Totally understandable if you can’t articulate such reasons, but I’m just curious about what the benchmarks are that you might find useful in informing your probability estimate.
That is to say, it’s unlikely that actual reversible cryopreservation would be possible; if it were, the technique probably wouldn’t be called cryonics anymore. So, other more intermediate steps that’d you’d find informative might be good to know about.
I actually had a nightmare recently where I was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer and would have preferred not to go through treatment, but felt pressured by other, more aggressively anti-death members of the rationality community. Was afraid people would think I didn’t care about them if I didn’t try to stay alive longer to be with them, etc. (I’m an ICU nurse; I have a pretty good S1 handle on how horrific a lot of life saving treatments are, and how much quality of life it’s possible to lose.)
I’ve thought about cryonics, but haven’t made a decision either way; right now, my feeling is that I don’t have anything against the principle, but that it doesn’t seem likely enough to work for the cost-benefit analysis to come out positive.
Can you describe the reasons are that make you think it is not likely enough to work? Totally understandable if you can’t articulate such reasons, but I’m just curious about what the benchmarks are that you might find useful in informing your probability estimate.
That is to say, it’s unlikely that actual reversible cryopreservation would be possible; if it were, the technique probably wouldn’t be called cryonics anymore. So, other more intermediate steps that’d you’d find informative might be good to know about.