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Cryonics: Cheating Death 
 
by Mark R. Whittington October 06, 2005

The Drawbacks of Cryonics

There are, of course, several downsides. For one thing, cryonics is very expensive. To become a member of a cryonics facility, one needs to pay an annual fee in the area of $400 a year. To preserve ones body in cryonic suspension, one will have to pay up to $150,000. For those wanting cryonic suspension on a budget, one can have one’s head preserved for just $50,000. Presumably people choosing this option will wait until the technology exists to regenerate or in some way construct a new body.

Then there is the fact that so far no one who has undergone cryonic suspension has ever been revived. There is no guarantee that revival will even be possible or that, having been accomplished, the person being revived will be healthy; future cures of the disease that killed them notwithstanding.

Supporters of cryonics point to the new science of nanotechnology as a possible means to revive human beings in cryonic suspension. Nanotechnology concerns the use of microscopic machines to perform various tasks. In the case of reviving people from cryonic suspension, these nanites, as they are called, would repair any cellular damage that has occurred due to the cryonic process and even reverse the effects of disease and aging on the molecular level.

There is finally the idea of culture shock, of people from the past suddenly revived in some distant future time that will seem to them to be at once wonderful and strange. To get an idea, imagine a person from—say—the 19th Century, in some kind of suspended animation, suddenly revived in our time. That person might be fascinated and even awed at the technological wonders that have been developed since his time. However, he also might be disturbed and alienated by changes in culture and mores that have occurred in the last hundred and fifty years or so. If the past is a different country, then surely the future is even more so. In any case, everyone a person being revived from cryonic suspension (unless they use the service themselves) will likely be dead. Such a person will be very alone.

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