Originally posted by obliterationIt'll most definitely be acheived. Although those rich folks may be in for a surprise when they're resuscitated, and finds that the world has changed. They'll be put to good use in restaurants and the like. 😀
Will it one day be achieved? How close are we? And.....would you like to come back from the dead?
I mean dead people have no real rights.
Originally posted by stockenand what gives live people any rights? rights are just things people object to not having or having done to them.
It'll most definitely be acheived. Although those rich folks may be in for a surprise when they're resuscitated, and finds that the world has changed. They'll be put to good use in restaurants and the like. 😀
I mean dead people have no real rights.
Originally posted by googlefudgeI rather like this post, google - very insightful.
and what gives live people any rights? rights are just things people object to not having or having done to them.
Oh, cryogenics. yes, perhaps. Methodologically, the problem is the growth of ice crystals causing cellular damage. New "antifreezes" from arctic fish may be a way of getting past that, allowing us to store people sub-zero without creating all that nasty human mush. I'd say yes it'll happen, but whether the technologies will survive long enough to revive these people is as much of a viable question, I think.
Originally posted by stockenwhat, in the chili? ...
It'll most definitely be acheived. Although those rich folks may be in for a surprise when they're resuscitated, and finds that the world has changed. They'll be put to good use in restaurants and the like. 😀
I mean dead people have no real rights.
Originally posted by zeeblebotLike they say, Chili today, hot tamali.
what, in the chili? ...
Like Scotty says, what happens if you do a contract for say, 300 years and 200 years later the whole friggin civilization dies. What then for the inturd ones?🙂 There would have to be some mechanism for revival if the power failed. Nice, eh, wake up 100 years after your civilization dies and you end up wandering around in an ecological nightmare.
Originally posted by sonhouseIf they start doing this, people will suddenly begin taking much better care of the environment!
Like they say, Chili today, hot tamali.
Like Scotty says, what happens if you do a contract for say, 300 years and 200 years later the whole friggin civilization dies. What then for the inturd ones?🙂 There would have to be some mechanism for revival if the power failed. Nice, eh, wake up 100 years after your civilization dies and you end up wandering around in an ecological nightmare.