There are ideas about what happens in those extreme conditions. But frankly I think your chances are better at very low energies. The difficult part about aspiring to live forever is that somehow you need the probability of an accident to drop off sharply and permanently, or else the asymptotic odds of survival are zero. Late-time de Sitter space should be a lot more peaceful than a collapsing cosmological fireball.
The difficult part about aspiring to live forever is that somehow you need the probability of an accident to drop off sharply and permanently
Not necessarily—you can use error-correcting algorithms and multiply redundant hardware to run your computer in spite of an error rate, as long as it is not too high.
There are ideas about what happens in those extreme conditions. But frankly I think your chances are better at very low energies. The difficult part about aspiring to live forever is that somehow you need the probability of an accident to drop off sharply and permanently, or else the asymptotic odds of survival are zero. Late-time de Sitter space should be a lot more peaceful than a collapsing cosmological fireball.
Not necessarily—you can use error-correcting algorithms and multiply redundant hardware to run your computer in spite of an error rate, as long as it is not too high.