How far would you go to avoid death? Frozen to Life is the true account of the author’s extraordinary answer to this question: If he cannot escape the constraints of a ‘natural’ lifespan, he will, upon his death, have his severed head cryonically preserved in a vat of liquid nitrogen in the Arizona desert. This book illuminates the astonishing science behind his decision, and the transformative power of the patternist thinking that carried him to it. From the initial confusion and isolation of his upbringing on the Scottish islands of Benbecula and Skye comes a curious inkling that collides with dominant religious dogmas and alters relationships: What am I? What is a ‘self’? Must selves die? Neuroscience—including the latest theories about the way mind emerges from the architecture of the brain—interweaves with philosophy, Buddhism, and personal testimony to create a fascinating and emotionally-charged insight into the psyche of a ‘cryonaut’ in waiting. Written with empathy, searing insight, and dark humour, Frozen to Life is both cutting edge and bleeding heart: a postmodern experiment in falling in love with life while preparing for death, in ways we can change ourselves radically without losing our treasured humanity, and in coming to understand that neither life nor death is what we think it is.
This book might serve as an updated introduction to the cryonics idea. Cryonics organizations badly need some new expository literature any way. They can’t depend on books written a generation or two back because these writings don’t incorporate the experience base of the real, existing practice of cryonics over the past 50 years. This literature doesn’t explain the bearing of current neuroscience, cryobiology and biotechnology on what cryonicists want to do. And it doesn’t address the criticisms directed towards the project, even ones I consider a bit foolish, like “But in the future you won’t know anyone!”
New cryonics book coming out later this month:
http://www.amazon.com/Frozen-Life-Personal-Mortality-Experiment/dp/0993334407
Frozen to Life: A Personal Mortality Experiment
by D.J. MacLennan (Author)
Paperback – August 31, 2015
This book might serve as an updated introduction to the cryonics idea. Cryonics organizations badly need some new expository literature any way. They can’t depend on books written a generation or two back because these writings don’t incorporate the experience base of the real, existing practice of cryonics over the past 50 years. This literature doesn’t explain the bearing of current neuroscience, cryobiology and biotechnology on what cryonicists want to do. And it doesn’t address the criticisms directed towards the project, even ones I consider a bit foolish, like “But in the future you won’t know anyone!”