Cryonics
Cryonics (often mistakenly called "
cryogenics") is the practice of
cryopreserving humans or animals that can no longer be sustained by contemporary
medicine until resuscitation may be possible in the future. The process is not currently reversible, and by law can only be performed on humans after legal death in anticipation that the early stages of
clinical death may be reversible in the future (see
information theoretical death). Cryonics is viewed with
skepticism by most scientists and doctors today. However, there is a high representation of scientists among cryonics supporters.
Scientific support for cryonics is based on projections of future technology, especially
molecular nanotechnology and
nanomedicine. Some scientists believe that future medicine
will enable
molecular-level repair and regeneration of damaged
tissues and
organs decades or centuries in the future.
Disease and
aging are also assumed to be reversible.
The central premise of cryonics is that
memory,
personality, and
identity are stored in the structure and chemistry of the
brain. While this view is widely accepted in
medicine, and
brain activity is known to stop and later resume under certain conditions, it is not generally accepted that current methods preserve the
brain well enough to permit revival in the future. Cryonics advocates point to studies showing that high concentrations of
cryoprotectant circulated through the
brain before cooling can mostly prevent freezing injury, preserving the fine
cell structures of the
brain in which
memory and
identity presumably reside.
To its detractors, the justification for the actual practice of cryonics is unclear, given present limitations of preservation technology. Currently cells, tissues, blood vessels, and some small animal organs can be reversibly
cryopreserved. Some
frogs can survive for a few months in a partially frozen state a few degrees below freezing, but this is not true
cryopreservation. Cryonics advocates counter that demonstrably reversible preservation is not necessary to achieve the present-day goal of cryonics, which is preservation of basic
brain information that encodes
memory and
personal identity. Preservation of this information is said to be sufficient to prevent
information theoretic death until future repairs are possible.
Probably the most famous
cryopreserved patient is
Ted Williams. The popular
urban legend that
Walt Disney was cryopreserved is false; he was cremated, and interred at
Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery.
Robert A. Heinlein, who
wrote enthusiastically of the concept, was cremated and his ashes distributed over the
Pacific Ocean.
Timothy Leary was a long-time cryonics advocate, and signed up with a major cryonics provider. He changed his mind, however, shortly before his death, and so was not cryopreserved.
Damage from ice formation and ischemia
Cryonics has traditionally been dismissed by mainstream
cryobiology, of which it is arguably a part. The reason generally given for this dismissal is that the
freezing process creates
ice crystals, which some scientists have claimed damage cells and cellular structures so as to render any future repair impossible. Cryonicists have long argued, however, that the extent of this damage was greatly exaggerated by the critics, presuming that some reasonable attempt is made to perfuse the body with
cryoprotectant chemicals (traditionally
glycerol) that inhibit ice crystal formation.
According to cryonicists, the ice crystal damage objection became moot around the turn of the millennium, when cryobiologists
Greg Fahy and
Brian Wowk, of
Twenty-First Century Medicine, developed major improvements in cryopreservation technology, including new
cryoprotectants and new cryoprotectant mixtures, greatly improving the feasibility of
vitrification, and resulting in the near-elimination of ice crystal formation in the brain.
Vitrification preserves tissue in a glassy rather than frozen state. In
glass, molecules do not rearrange themselves into grainy crystals as they are cooled, but instead become locked together while still randomly arranged as in a fluid, forming a "solid liquid" as the temperature falls below the glass transition temperature.
Alcor Life Extension Foundation has since been researching the use of these cryoprotectants, along with a new, faster cooling method, to vitrify whole human brains (
neurovitrification). The
Cryonics Institute (CI), uses a vitrification solution developed by its in-house
cryobiologist, Dr. Yuri Pichugin. CI has developed computer-controlled cooling boxes to ensure that cooling is rapid above T
g (
glass transition temperature, solidification temperature) and slow below T
g (to reduce fracturing due to thermal
stress).
Current solutions being used for
vitrification are stable enough to avoid crystallization even when a vitrified
brain is warmed up. This has recently allowed brains to be vitrified, warmed back up, and examined for ice damage using light and
electron microscopy. No ice crystal damage was found.
However, if the circulation of the brain is compromised, protective chemicals may not be able to reach all parts of the brain, and
freezing may occur either during cooling or during rewarming. Cryonicists argue, however, that injury caused during cooling might, in the future, be repairable before the vitrified brain is warmed back up, and that damage during rewarming might be prevented by adding more
cryoprotectant in the solid state, or by improving rewarming methods. But even given the best vitrification that current technology allows, rewarming still does not allow revival, even if crystallization is avoided, due to the toxic effects of the cryoprotectants. Again, however, cryonicists counter that future technology might be able to overcome this difficulty, and find a way to combat the toxicity after rewarming. If, for example, the
toxicity is due to
denatured proteins, those proteins could be repaired or replaced.
Some critics have speculated that because a cryonics patient has been declared legally dead, their organs must be dead, and thus unable to allow
cryoprotectants to reach the majority of cells. Cryonicists respond that it has been empirically demonstrated that, so long as the
cryopreservation process begins immediately after legal death is declared, the individual organs (and perhaps even the patient as a whole) remain biologically alive, and vitrification (particularly of the brain) is quite feasible. This same principle is what allows organs, such as hearts, to be transplanted, even though they come from dead donors.
Cryonics procedures cannot begin until legal pronouncement of
death has occurred, and pronouncement is usually based on cessation of
heartbeat (only very rarely on brain activity measurements). When the heart stops beating and
blood flow ceases,
ischemic damage begins. Deprived of
oxygen and
nutrient,
cells,
tissues and
organs begin to deteriorate. If the heart is restarted after too many minutes have passed, the reintroduced oxygen can cause even more damage due to
oxidative stress, a phenomenon known as
reperfusion injury. Cryonicists try to minimize ischemic and reperfusion injury by beginning cardio-pulmonary support (much like
CPR) and cooling as soon as possible after pronouncement of death. Anti-
clotting agents like
heparin and
antioxidants may be administered. Suspended Animation, Inc is a
Florida company that specializes in research into, and implementation of, optimal procedures for minimizing
ischemic injury in cryonics rescue.
Revival
It is universally agreed by scientists and cryonics advocates that reversing human cryopreservation is not possible with "any near-term technology."
Those who believe that revival may someday be possible generally look toward advanced
bioengineering,
molecular nanotechnology, or
nanomedicine as key technologies. Revival requires repairing damage from lack of oxygen,
cryoprotectant toxicity, thermal stress (fracturing), and freezing in tissues that do not successfully
vitrify. In many cases extensive
tissue regeneration will be necessary. Hypothetical revival scenarios generally envision repairs being performed by vast numbers of microscopic organisms or devices.
These devices would restore healthy cell structure and chemistry at the molecular level, ideally before warming. More radically,
mind transfer has also been suggested as a possible revival approach if and when technology is ever developed to scan the memory contents of a preserved brain.
It has often been written that cryonics revival will be a last-in-first-out (
LIFO) process. In this view, preservation methods will get progressively better until eventually they are demonstrably reversible, after which medicine will begin to reach back and revive people cryopreserved by more primitive methods. Revival of people cryopreserved by the current combination of
neurovitrification and deep-cooling (technically not "freezing", as cryoprotectant inhibits ice crystallization) may require centuries, if it is possible at all.
It has been claimed that if technologies for general molecular analysis and repair are ever developed, then theoretically any damaged body could be "revived." Survival would then depend on whether preserved brain information was sufficient to permit restoration of all or part of the
personal identity of the original person, with
amnesia being the final dividing line between life and death.
Social obstacles
Even if cryonics were scientifically certain to work, there are social obstacles that make success uncertain. The most obvious social obstacle is the prevailing belief that cryonics cannot work, and that cryonics subjects are dead. Although a legal determination of death by contemporary medicine is necessary to implement cryonics, this determination carries with it the implication of futility. By custom and law, dead bodies are objects, not persons with rights or protections. This removal of personhood is a cultural obstacle not faced by living people with even the poorest prognosis. For this reason, cryonics advocates call cryonics subjects "patients" and argue that morally they shouldn't be considered dead, even though that is their status under present law.
A related question is why future society would want to care for or revive "dead" people. Cryonicists note that a subset of society already cares for cryonics patients, and has done so for decades. It is assumed that should revival ever become possible, that same subset of society (the advocates who maintained patients long enough for revival to become possible) would pursue revival. They also believe that a future society with technology advanced enough to reverse cryopreservation would necessarily have views of life and death different from society today. They generally reject the idea that they are trying to "raise the dead", viewing cryonics instead as a highly experimental medical procedure. It has also been suggested that future society may have an interest in revival of cryonics patients for intellectual or historical value, although cryonicists tend to argue that healing and recovering sick people is an ethical imperative regardless of value to society at large.
Neuropreservation is
cryopreservation of the
brain, usually within the head, with surgical removal and disposal of the rest of the body. Neuropreservation, sometimes called "neuro," is one of two distinct preservation options in cryonics, the other being "whole body" preservation.
Neuropreservation is motivated by the fact that the
brain is the primary repository of memory and
personal identity. (For instance, spinal cord injury victims, organ transplant patients, and amputees appear to retain their
personal identity.) It is also motivated by the belief that reversing any type of cryonic preservation is so difficult and complex that any future technology capable of it must by its nature be capable of generalized
tissue regeneration, including regrowth of a new body around a repaired brain. Some suggested revival scenarios for whole body patients even involve discarding the original body and regenerating a new one because tissues are so badly damaged by the preservation process. These considerations, along with lower costs, easier transportation in emergencies, and the specific focus on brain preservation quality, have motivated many cryonicists to choose
neuropreservation.
The advantages and disadvantages of
neuropreservation are often debated among cryonics advocates. Critics of
neuropreservation note that the body is a record of much life experience, including learned motor skills. While few cryonicists doubt that a revived neuro patient would be the same person, there are wider questions about how a regenerated body might feel different from the original.
Partly for these reasons (as well as for better public relations), the
Cryonics Institute preserves only whole bodies. Some proponents of
neuropreservation agree with these concerns, but still feel that lower costs and better brain preservation justify preserving only the brain. About three-quarters of the patients stored at
Alcor are "neuros".
Although media sometimes report that
cloning is expected to regrow new bodies, cryonics experts generally dismiss cloning as a primitive technology that will be long obsolete before any kind of revival becomes possible. Similarly, although neurosurgeon
Robert J. White proved
that body transplants were possible in primates, transplantation is dismissed in favor of tissue regeneration as the most elegant method for treating
neuropreservation and other trauma in future medicine.
Costs of cryonics vary greatly, ranging from $28,000 for whole body cryopreservation by the
Cryonics Institute, to $80,000 for
neuropreservation by
Alcor, or $150,000 for whole body cryopreservation by
Alcor or the
American Cryonics Society. To some extent these cost differences reflect differences in how fees are quoted. The
Cryonics Institute fee doesn't include "standby" (a team that begins procedures at bedside), transportation costs, or funeral director expenses outside of Michigan, which must be purchased as extras. CI Members wanting Standby and Transport from cryonics professionals can contract for additional payment to the
Florida-based company Suspended Animation, Inc.
While cryonics is sometimes suspected of being greatly profitable, the high expenses of doing cryonics are well documented.
The expenses are comparable to major transplant surgeries. The largest single expense, especially for whole body cases, is the money that must be set aside to generate interest to pay for maintenance in perpetuity.
The most common method of paying for cryonics is
life insurance, which spreads the cost over many years. Cryonics advocates are quick to point out that such insurance is especially affordable for young people. It has been claimed that cryonics is "affordable for the vast majority" of people in the industrialized world who really want it and plan for it.
Cryonics is based on a view of dying as a process that can be stopped in the minutes, and perhaps hours, following
clinical death. If
death is not an event that happens suddenly when the heart stops, this raises philosophical questions about what exactly death is. In 2005 an ethics debate in the medical journal, Critical Care, noted "…few if any patients pronounced dead by today's physicians are in fact truly dead by any scientifically rigorous criteria."
Cryonics proponent
Thomas Donaldson has argued that "death" based on
cardiac arrest or resuscitation failure is a purely social construction used to justify terminating care of dying patients.
In this view, legal death and its aftermath are a form of
euthanasia in which sick people are abandoned. Philosopher
Max More suggested a distinction between death associated with circumstances and intention versus death that is absolutely irreversible.
Absolutely irreversible death has also been called
information-theoretic death.
Bioethicist James Hughes has written that increasing rights will accrue to cryonics patients as prospects for revival become clearer, noting that recovery of legally dead persons has precedent in the discovery of missing persons.
Ethical and
theological opinions of cryonics tend to pivot on the issue of whether cryonics is regarded as
interment or
medicine. If cryonics is interment, then
religious beliefs about death and
afterlife come into consideration. Resuscitation is generally deemed impossible because the
soul is gone, and according to most religions only
God can
resurrect the dead. Expensive interment is seen as a waste of resources. If cryonics is regarded as medicine, with legal death as a mere enabling mechanism, then cryonics is a long-term
coma with uncertain prognosis. It is continuing to care for sick people when others have given up, and a legitimate use of resources to sustain human life. Cryonics advocates complain that theological dismissal of cryonics because it is interment is a circular argument because calling cryonics "interment" presumes that cryonics cannot work.
They believe future technical advances will validate their view that cryonics patients are recoverable, and therefore never really dead.
Alcor has published a vigorous Christian defense of cryonics
, including excerpts of a sermon by
Lutheran Reverend Kay Glaesner. Noted
Christian apologist
John Warwick Montgomery has defended cryonics.
In 1969, a
Roman Catholic priest
consecrated the cryonics capsule of Ann DeBlasio, one of the first cryonics patients. In 2002, a
Muslim cleric indicated in a media interview that cryonics would be compatible with
Islam if it were medicine.
Benjamin Franklin suggested in a famous 1773 letter
that it might be possible to preserve human life in a suspended state for centuries. However the modern era of cryonics began in 1962 when Michigan college physics teacher
Robert Ettinger proposed in a privately published book, "The Prospect of Immortality"
, that freezing people may be a way to reach future medical technology. Even though freezing a person is apparently fatal, Ettinger argued that what appears to be fatal today may be reversible in the future. He applied the same argument to the process of dying itself, saying that the early stages of
clinical death may be reversible in the future. Combining these two ideas, he suggested that freezing recently deceased people may be a way to save lives.
Slightly before
Ettinger's book was complete, Evan Cooper
(writing as Nathan Duhring) privately published a book called "Immortality: Physically, Scientifically, Now" that independently suggested the same idea. Cooper founded the Life Extension Society in 1965 to promote freezing people.
Ettinger came to be credited as the originator of cryonics, perhaps because his book was republished by Doubleday in 1964 on recommendation of
Isaac Asimov and
Fred Pohl, and received more publicity. Ettinger also stayed with the movement longer. Nevertheless, cryonics historian R. Michael Perry has written "Evan Cooper deserves the principal credit for forming an organized cryonics movement."
The actual word "cryonics" was invented by Karl Werner in 1965 in conjunction with the founding of the Cryonics Society of New York (CSNY) by
Curtis Henderson and
Saul Kent that same year. This was followed by the founding of the Cryonics Society of Michigan (CSM) and Cryonics Society of California (CSC) in 1966, and Bay Area Cryonics Society (BACS) in 1969 (renamed the
American Cryonics Society, or ACS, in 1985). CSM eventually became the Immortalist Society, a non-profit affiliate of the
Cryonics Institute (CI), a cryonics service organization founded by
Robert Ettinger in 1976, now the second-largest cryonics organization.
Although there was at least one earlier aborted case, it is generally accepted that the first person frozen with intent of future resuscitation was
Dr. James Bedford, a 73-year-old psychology professor frozen under crude conditions by CSC on
January 12,
1967. The case made the cover of a limited print run of
Life Magazine before the presses were stopped to report the death of three astronauts in the
Apollo 1 fire instead.
Cryonics suffered a major setback in 1979 when it was discovered that nine bodies stored by CSC in a cemetery in Chatsworth, California, thawed due to depletion of funds.
Some of the bodies had apparently thawed years earlier without notification. The head of CSC was sued, and negative publicity slowed cryonics growth for years afterward. Of seventeen documented cryonics cases between 1967 and 1973, only James Bedford remains
cryopreserved today. Strict financial controls and requirements adopted in response to the Chatsworth scandal have resulted in the successful maintenance of almost all cryonics cases since that era.
The largest cryonics organization today was established by
Fred and Linda Chamberlain in 1972 as the Alcor Society for Solid State Hypothermia (ALCOR). In 1977 the name was changed to the
Alcor Life Extension Foundation. In 1982, the Institute for Advanced Biological Studies (IABS) founded by
Mike Darwin and Steve Bridge in Indiana merged with Alcor. By combining
Darwin's technical and communications skills with those of medical scientist
Jerry Leaf, this merger is generally regarded as a key event that allowed Alcor to attract a critical mass of knowledgeable people, eventually moving Alcor to a leading position in the field.
During the 1980s Darwin worked with
UCLA cardiothoracic surgery researcher
Jerry Leaf at
Alcor to develop a medical model for cryonics procedures. Prior to
Leaf and
Darwin, cryonics preparation was little more than a mortuary procedure in which
cryoprotectant chemicals were substituted for embalming fluid.
Leaf and
Darwin showed that
CPR and medications applied immediately after
cardiac arrest, followed by cardiopulmonary bypass and thoracic surgery for access to major blood vessels, could greatly reduce
ischemic injury (injury caused by stopped blood flow) in cryonics patients. They pioneered the cryonics procedure now known as a "standby", in which a stabilization team stands by to institute life support procedures at the bedside of a cryonics patient as soon as possible after the heart stops. While supporting blood circulation and oxygenation of cryonics patients was first proposed by
Ettinger, and the Cryonics Society of Michigan had a
Westinghouse Iron Heart for this purpose as early as the late 1960s, the first consistent documented use of such procedures was in the 1980s.
Cryonics received new support in the 1980s when MIT engineer
Eric Drexler started publishing papers and books foreseeing the new field of
molecular nanotechnology. His 1986 book,
Engines of Creation, included an entire chapter on cryonics applications.
Cryonics advocates saw the nascent field of nanotechnology as vindication of their long held view that molecular repair of injured tissue was theoretically possible.
Nanotechnology has also been the cause of controversy within the cryonics field, with some cryonics advocates arguing that sophisticated preservation methods aren't necessary because "nanotechnology is necessary and sufficient" for cryonics to work. Critics countered that believing nanotechnology is necessary and sufficient without regard to preservation quality is more religion than science. The simultaneous advent of
Leaf and
Darwin's medical model of cryonics, and the nanotechnology repair paradigm, polarized cryonics into two schools of thought that persist to the present day.
One school tends to believe that simple inexpensive procedures administered by morticians are sufficient, while the other advocates monitoring and maintaining viability by contemporary medical methods as far as possible into the procedure, with reversible
suspended animation as an ultimate goal.
In the late 1980s a nexus of favorable circumstances, including technical progress, support from nanotechnology experts, and effective communications, led to a period of rapid growth, especially of
Alcor.
Alcor's membership expanded ten-fold within a decade, with a 30% annual growth rate between 1988 and 1992.
Alcor was disrupted by political turmoil in 1993 when a group of activists left to start the CryoCare Foundation
, and associated for-profit companies CryoSpan, Inc. (headed by Paul Wakfer) and BioPreservation, Inc.
(headed by
Mike Darwin).
Darwin and collaborators made many technical advances during this time period, including a landmark study documenting high quality brain preservation by freezing with high concentrations of glycerol.
CryoCare ceased operations in 1999 when they were unable to renew their service contract with BioPreservation. CryoCare's two patients stored at CryoSpan were transferred to
Alcor. Several
ACS patients stored at CryoSpan were transferred to
CI.
There have been numerous, often transient, for-profit companies involved in cryonics. For-profit companies were often paired or affiliated with non-profit groups they served. Some of these companies, with non-profits they served in parentheses, were Cryonic Interment, Inc. (CSC), Cryo-Span Corporation (CSNY), Cryo-Care Equipment Corporation (CSC and CSNY), Manrise Corporation (
Alcor), CryoVita, Inc. (
Alcor), BioTransport, Inc. (
Alcor), Trans Time, Inc.
(BACS), Soma, Inc. (IABS), CryoSpan, Inc. (CryoCare and
ACS), BioPreservation, Inc. (CryoCare and
ACS), Kryos, Inc. (
ACS), Suspended Animation, Inc.
(
CI,
ACS, and
Alcor). Only Trans Time and Suspended Animation still exist. Apparently none of the companies were ever profitable. The cryonics field seems to have largely consolidated around three non-profit groups,
Alcor,
Cryonics Institute (CI), and the
American Cryonics Society (ACS) all deriving significant income from bequests and donations.
As research in the 1990s revealed the damaging effects of freezing in greater detail, there was a trend to use higher concentrations of glycerol
cryoprotectant to prevent freezing injury. In 2001 Alcor began using
vitrification (a technology borrowed from mainstream organ preservation research) in an attempt to completely prevent ice formation during cold preservation. Because
vitrification technology could then only be applied to the head, heads and bodies were sometimes separated to optimize preservation of the brain, causing much public confusion.
In 2005 Alcor began applying
vitrification (or attempted vitrification
) treatment to the whole body simultaneously without removal of the head. In the same year, the Cryonics Institute began using a new procedure in which the head was vitrified while still attached to the body, which was frozen without any
cryoprotectant. A year later the Cryonics Institute began perfusing the body with
ethylene glycol.
When the baseball star
Ted Williams was
cryopreserved by
Alcor in 2002 a family dispute arose as to whether Ted had really wanted to be
cryopreserved. Following a July, 2003
Sports Illustrated article claiming that Alcor had mishandled Ted Williams
. At minimum, Alcor could have been denied use of the
Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, which could have impaired its ability to gain rapid access to cryonics patients. Despite not being responsible for Ted Williams, the media blitz resulted in the
Cryonics Institute (CI) being placed under a "Cease and Desist" order by the State of
Michigan for six months. Finally the Michigan government decided to regulate CI as a
cemetery.
Alcor currently maintains about 70 cryonics patients in
Scottsdale, Arizona; the
Cryonics Institute maintained 74 human patients and about 40 pets (dogs, cats, and birds) at its Clinton Township,
Michigan facility as of 22 May 2006. There are no cryonics service providers outside of the United States, although there are support groups in
Europe,
Canada,
Australia and the
United Kingdom.
Cryonics in mass culture
Procedures similar to cryonics have been featured in innumerable
science fiction stories to aid space travel, or as means to transport a character from the past into the future. In addition to accomplishing whatever the character's primary task is in the future, he or she must cope with the strangeness of a new world, which may contain only traces of their previous surroundings. This prospect of alienation is often cited as a major reason for the unpopularity of cryonics.
Relatively few stories have been published concerning the primary objective and definition of cryonics, which is medical time travel. Novels with this theme include the national best-seller
The First Immortal by
James Halperin,
The Age of the Pussyfoot by
Fred Pohl,
Tomorrow and Tomorrow by
Charles Sheffield,
Chiller by Sterling Blake (aka
Gregory Benford),
Ralph's Journey by David Pizer, and
Formerly Brandewyne by Jude Liebermann. The novel
Fiasco by
Stanisław Lem raised the question of whether a person
cryopreserved for centuries and then revived with amnesia is still the same person. A 1931 short story by
Neil R. Jones called
The Jameson Satellite has been credited with giving
Robert Ettinger the seed of the idea of cryonics when he was a teenager.
Movies featuring cryonics for medical purposes include the
Woody Allen comedy,
Sleeper, and the films
Late for Dinner and
Vanilla Sky. One of the most famous movies regarding a cryonics-like process was 1992's
Forever Young, starring Mel Gibson. Although not about cryonics per se, the
Ron Howard film
Cocoon has been hailed by cryonics advocates as expressing the values motivating cryonics better than any other film.
On television, producer
David E. Kelley wrote well-researched and essentially accurate portrayals of cryonics for the T.V. shows
L.A. Law (1990 episode
),
Picket Fences (1994 episode
), and
Boston Legal(2005 episode
). In each case, there was a dying plaintiff petitioning a court for the right to elective
cryopreservation. The episode "
The Neutral Zone" from the first season of
Star Trek: The Next Generation also featured three
cryopreserved people in an ancient spacecraft. They had legally died in the 20th century, but were viable and recoverable by 24th century technology. The
1987 episode of
Miami Vice "The Big Thaw" featured a cryopreserved
reggae singer whose wife wants his revival stopped so she can inherit his estate. The episode "When We Dead Awaken" of
seaQuest DSV features Lieutenant James Brody's mother having been placed in cryonic stasis following a terminal infection. Cryonics was also satirized by the comedy cartoon series
Futurama, in which the character,
Philip J. Fry, is accidentally
cryopreserved at the turn of the millennium on
December 31st 1999, and revived on
December 31st 2999, a thousand years later.
Comic books also feature characters that have been affected by cryonics.
Jean Grey, a superheroine from
Uncanny X-Men, had been revived after her body was cryonically stored due to a fatal attack from
Sentinels.
The subculture of cryonicists
Cryonicists form a subculture because of their common interests and radical departure from standard cultural norms. To choose cryonics usually requires an appreciation for science/technology (
technophilia), love of life (a desire for
life extension), independent thinking and an ability to resist social pressure/disapproval. Male cryonicists outnumber females by three or four to one. Cryonicists are often
computer professionals,
libertarians, readers of
science fiction and people who have little regard for conventional
religion. Often cryonicists have chosen cryonics without support or interest by any of their family or friends, and participate in the cryonics community by
e-mail or occasional meetings. Although the alienation of cryonicists from mass culture should make them a close community, their independence and passion has often made cryonicists intensely hostile to each other.
Cryonicists have been able to form cryonics societies in highly populated areas (see
history section), have regular meetings, publish magazines and hold conferences.
Saul Kent and Evan Cooper as well as
Fred and Linda Chamberlain were active in organizing cryonics conferences in the early years of cryonics. The magazines of the cryonics organizations have also helped keep members of the cryonics community informed about events and common problems. On July 24, 1988 a
Ph.D. in
computer science named Kevin Brown started an
electronic mailing list called
CryoNet that became a powerful tool of communication for the cryonics community. Although the list often is filled with
philosophical ruminations about the meaning of
personal identity, it remains the most central point of contact for cryonicists.
Cryonicists have also had a common jargon, including their use of the words
patient,
death,
deanimation and
suspension. The phrase
cryonic suspension to describe
cryopreservation is falling into disfavor, partly because cryopreservation is not really
suspended animation and human bodies or heads are not buoyant enough in
liquid nitrogen to be suspended. As in other subcultures, some members of the community can have strong feelings about the use of "
politically correct" cryonics language.
*
Biological immortality*
Biostasis*
Cryobiology*
Engineered negligible senescence*
Hibernation*
Immortality Institute*
Information theoretical death*
Life extension*
Senescence*
Suspended animation*
Vitrification*
Cryonics FAQ*[news:sci.cryonics sci.cryonics Usenet newsgroup]
*
CryoNet*
The First Immortal Free download of popular, critically acclaimed cryonics novel
*
The Prospect of Immortality Free download of the book that started the cryonics movement
*
Ralph Merkle's introduction to cryonics*
Alcor Life Extension Foundation*
Cryonics Institute*
American Cryonics Society*
Cryonics Europe*
Cryonics Society - Resources and Advocacy*
Cryonics Society of Canada*
The Immortality Institute*
Longevity Meme*
Cryonics UK*
Death in the Deep Freeze*
"A Cold Calculus Leads Cryonauts To Put Assets on Ice" (Wall Street Journal)