Disgust and anger, that’s interesting. I wonder if that might be due to them feeling it’s unfair that some people might survive when everyone else has died, or seeing it as some kind of insult to their religion like trying to evade hell (with the implication that you won’t be motivated enough to avoid sinning, for instance). If that’s the case, you’re probably right that my current reaction is different from the ones that others would have. My initial reaction was pretty similar, though. My introduction to cryo was in a cartoon as a child—the bad guys were freezing themselves and using the blood of children to live forever. I felt it was terrifying and horribly unfair that the bad guys could live forever and creepy that there were so many frozen dead bodies. I didn’t think about getting it myself until I met someone who had signed up. My reaction was “Oh, you can actually do that? I had no idea.”—and it felt weird because it seemed strange to believe that freezing yourself is going to save your life (I didn’t think technology was that far along yet), but I’m OK with entertaining weird ideas, so I was pretty neutral. I thought about whether I should do it, but I wasn’t in a financial position to take on new bills at the time, so I stored that knowledge for later. Then, when I joined LessWrong, I began seeing mentions of cryo all over. I had the strong sense that it would be wrong to spend so much on a small chance of saving my own life when others are currently dying, but that was countered pretty decently by one of the posts linked to above. Now I’m discovering cached religious thoughts (I thought I removed them all. These are so insidious!) and am wondering if I will wake up as some sort of miserable medical Frankenstein.
I can’t tell you whether it’s worth it to convince me or learn to convince people, either. I’m not even sure it’s worth signing up, after all. (:
Disgust and anger, that’s interesting. I wonder if that might be due to them feeling it’s unfair that some people might survive when everyone else has died, or seeing it as some kind of insult to their religion like trying to evade hell (with the implication that you won’t be motivated enough to avoid sinning, for instance). If that’s the case, you’re probably right that my current reaction is different from the ones that others would have. My initial reaction was pretty similar, though. My introduction to cryo was in a cartoon as a child—the bad guys were freezing themselves and using the blood of children to live forever. I felt it was terrifying and horribly unfair that the bad guys could live forever and creepy that there were so many frozen dead bodies. I didn’t think about getting it myself until I met someone who had signed up. My reaction was “Oh, you can actually do that? I had no idea.”—and it felt weird because it seemed strange to believe that freezing yourself is going to save your life (I didn’t think technology was that far along yet), but I’m OK with entertaining weird ideas, so I was pretty neutral. I thought about whether I should do it, but I wasn’t in a financial position to take on new bills at the time, so I stored that knowledge for later. Then, when I joined LessWrong, I began seeing mentions of cryo all over. I had the strong sense that it would be wrong to spend so much on a small chance of saving my own life when others are currently dying, but that was countered pretty decently by one of the posts linked to above. Now I’m discovering cached religious thoughts (I thought I removed them all. These are so insidious!) and am wondering if I will wake up as some sort of miserable medical Frankenstein.
I can’t tell you whether it’s worth it to convince me or learn to convince people, either. I’m not even sure it’s worth signing up, after all. (: