https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024...be-eternal
This new article describes how one materialist neuroscientist now believes he has found a very possible way of preserving human life indefinitely using very advanced medical techniques. Being a materialist he of course closed-mindedly believes that the mind and consciousness is what the physical brain does, and the only way to indefinitely prolong life is to somehow scientifically defeat the natural degradative disease and natural aging processes that up until now have defined the normal lifespan. Also, his materialist existential despair due to believing he is basically meat destined in the present to inevitably be annihilated must have spurred him on.
He thinks that the advocates of cryopreservation have led the way in this early on, but have picked a so far impractical method - their idea is of long term preservation of human bodies frozen at liquid nitrogen temperatures, patients who just died of various incurable diseases, in the hope that future medical advances will enable successful cure and rescusitation, to greatly or indefinitely extend human lifetimes. The problem with this is that so far irreparable cellular damage is still being done by the cryogenic freezing process, making future revival impossible.
This neuroscientist thinks he has found a way around this basic problem, by using fixation of the brain and body cellular structure in a special stabilizing chemical that prevents ice crystal formation and resultant irreparable damage. He believes that this improved cryopreservation technique along with straightforward extrapolation of other developmental medical technologies could conceivably eventually lead to indefinite preservation of life. He apparently thinks that ultimately the new technology would have to be applied only to the brain, since in his belief the physical brain encompasses the total of our identity.
Most importantly, this researcher reports that this new basic brain-preserving technology actually is now not just possible but is in the advanced development stage, expected for near-future release and use on patients. Apparently there have been successful animal tests.
Of course mostly everybody would like to live for a very long time though not presumably forever, but I think that this developing technique is possibly dangerous and destructive from at least three major problems. The most important of these problems would relate to a proper understanding of the essentially spiritual nature of human beings. If looked at from this standpoint, this proposed "live forever" medical technology could seriously interfere with the underlying basic purpose of the Earth existence of human beings. There is (contrary to conventional materialist neuroscience) a lot of strong empirical evidence and philosphical arguments for the existence of an afterlife and of reincarnation, and of course the existence of a soul or spirit. This is still scoffed at by the physicalists, but they stand on unfirm ground.
We couldn't predict what problems will incur if the basic designed-by-the-powers-that-be purposes of human life and death on the Earth are so drastically interfered with. Presumable there could be very negative consequences.
The second major problem of this apparently possible new indefinitely life-preserving medical technology would be in the social turmoil due to the probable resultant overpopulation and consequent exhaustion of natural resources that would ensue without drastic birth control measures. There would have to be massive social changes.
The third major problem would be the great likelihood that such technology would be very unevenly available, mainly to the rich and powerful, which would lead to major stresses in our social fabric, anger of the have-nots. This great increase in the inequality problems of our society could lead to yet more social turmoil.
So it seems to me that the problems of this new medical technology probably outweigh the possible advantages, and it shouldn't be pursued. But unfortunately, as with generative AI, there are no practical controls for dangerous new profit-making technologies in our society, so it may really come about.
(This post was last modified: 2024-12-07, 07:52 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 1 time in total.)
This new article describes how one materialist neuroscientist now believes he has found a very possible way of preserving human life indefinitely using very advanced medical techniques. Being a materialist he of course closed-mindedly believes that the mind and consciousness is what the physical brain does, and the only way to indefinitely prolong life is to somehow scientifically defeat the natural degradative disease and natural aging processes that up until now have defined the normal lifespan. Also, his materialist existential despair due to believing he is basically meat destined in the present to inevitably be annihilated must have spurred him on.
He thinks that the advocates of cryopreservation have led the way in this early on, but have picked a so far impractical method - their idea is of long term preservation of human bodies frozen at liquid nitrogen temperatures, patients who just died of various incurable diseases, in the hope that future medical advances will enable successful cure and rescusitation, to greatly or indefinitely extend human lifetimes. The problem with this is that so far irreparable cellular damage is still being done by the cryogenic freezing process, making future revival impossible.
This neuroscientist thinks he has found a way around this basic problem, by using fixation of the brain and body cellular structure in a special stabilizing chemical that prevents ice crystal formation and resultant irreparable damage. He believes that this improved cryopreservation technique along with straightforward extrapolation of other developmental medical technologies could conceivably eventually lead to indefinite preservation of life. He apparently thinks that ultimately the new technology would have to be applied only to the brain, since in his belief the physical brain encompasses the total of our identity.
Most importantly, this researcher reports that this new basic brain-preserving technology actually is now not just possible but is in the advanced development stage, expected for near-future release and use on patients. Apparently there have been successful animal tests.
Of course mostly everybody would like to live for a very long time though not presumably forever, but I think that this developing technique is possibly dangerous and destructive from at least three major problems. The most important of these problems would relate to a proper understanding of the essentially spiritual nature of human beings. If looked at from this standpoint, this proposed "live forever" medical technology could seriously interfere with the underlying basic purpose of the Earth existence of human beings. There is (contrary to conventional materialist neuroscience) a lot of strong empirical evidence and philosphical arguments for the existence of an afterlife and of reincarnation, and of course the existence of a soul or spirit. This is still scoffed at by the physicalists, but they stand on unfirm ground.
We couldn't predict what problems will incur if the basic designed-by-the-powers-that-be purposes of human life and death on the Earth are so drastically interfered with. Presumable there could be very negative consequences.
The second major problem of this apparently possible new indefinitely life-preserving medical technology would be in the social turmoil due to the probable resultant overpopulation and consequent exhaustion of natural resources that would ensue without drastic birth control measures. There would have to be massive social changes.
The third major problem would be the great likelihood that such technology would be very unevenly available, mainly to the rich and powerful, which would lead to major stresses in our social fabric, anger of the have-nots. This great increase in the inequality problems of our society could lead to yet more social turmoil.
So it seems to me that the problems of this new medical technology probably outweigh the possible advantages, and it shouldn't be pursued. But unfortunately, as with generative AI, there are no practical controls for dangerous new profit-making technologies in our society, so it may really come about.
Quote:"It’s this idea which lies at the heart of Neuroscientist Dr. Zeleznikow-Johnston’s new book, The Future Loves You: How and Why We Should Abolish Death. A manifesto for – and road map to, he hopes – today’s terminally diseased and dying being offered a pause button of their own. A chance to halt their biological clocks, until such a time that science and medicine has advanced sufficiently.
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Just as it’s the words printed in a book, rather than the specific ink used to form them, that gives its pages meaning, Zeleznikow-Johnston believes the same to be true of you and I. Here lies the heart of Zeleznikow-Johnston’s proposition. “If that’s the case, then what can we do now to preserve these identities, when we can’t currently cure someone’s health issue, but might in the future, if only we could buy some time.”
With current technology, Zeleznikow-Johnston believes, this is already possible; scientifically straightforward, too. There are the obvious examples where we press pause already: sperm, eggs or embryos can be frozen in stasis for decades before being implanted. “What you’re likely less aware of,” he says, “are other analogous surgical procedures already in use. Sometimes, during surgery for aneurysms, or damage to blood vessels around the heart, doctors cannot simply route around with bypasses.” Blood flow in these bodies needs halting if an operation has any chance of success. In normal circumstances, this would prove fatal. For decades, however, surgeons have been circumventing death with a technique known as deep hypothermic circulatory arrest.
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Now, Zeleznikow-Johnston offers an alternative suggestion: aldehyde-stabilised cryopreservation, also known as fixation. “Essentially,” he says, “by introducing chemicals at the opportune moment which preserve the structure of someone’s brain, we can hold onto its circuitry and structures.”
Once frozen, in essence, preserving our identity indefinitely. “In labs, this process of fixation is used routinely with animal research. Developed in 2015, it’s not a complicated procedure and has been tested on large animals and humans, postmortem.”
Two groups on the US west coast, Zeleznikow-Johnston tells me, are on the cusp of offering this to the public. Another in Europe. “It can certainly be done today,” he’s confident, “and in the next year, it’ll be more accessible. It could be rolled out quickly, if there was demand.”
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But how we might eventually resurrect remains unclear. What use is pressing pause without a restart button? There, he accepts, we’re firmly into the field of sci-fi. Unfazed, Zeleznikow-Johnston opines that major advances in nanomedicine offer one route; else there’s what’s known as mind-uploading, or mind-emulation – transferring someone to a digital form. “Break down the elements and it’s a fairly straightforward extrapolation from today’s technology,” he says. “Take very high resolution scans of brain structure to characterise how someone’s neurons work, recreate it in a digital format then put it in another robotic, virtual or biological body.” Future scientists will need to fill in the details. “Yet if the memories and experiences which define us are held on to, a person has survived. A robotic or digital brain, if done right, I’d argue, is still you.”
If tomorrow, Zeleznikow-Johnston received a terminal diagnosis, he’d eventually undergo the brain preservation procedure. He’d encourage friends and family to follow. “My fear of death hasn’t been assuaged,” he says. “It still scares me. What I’m proposing isn’t magic, even if it comes to fruition.” Countless variables would need to land in our favour: the tech developed and implemented properly. Nuclear war and climate catastrophe avoided. Some future generation opting to offer their distant ancestors another chance at life. “Even with a guarantee of everyone I love returning, I’d still miss them in the short term, but it does provide some comfort. My existential despair that everyone I love will one day disappear hasn’t gone away completely, but it offers a glimmer of hope.”