Frozen through Time
Posted: Sat Oct 08, 2005 11:27 am
Okay, I admit, sometimes I get a kick out of watching Star Trek
Earlier this morning, perhaps as a substitute for Saturday morning cartoons, my partner and I watched an episode of "Next Generation," in which three characters had been frozen upon death, in the hope medical science would one day be able to revive them and cure any ills. And of cource the USS Enterprise found their capsule floating in space....
This got me to thinking....
Imagine this: You die tomorrow, you have your body frozen, and you are revived 400 years into the future. How do you imagine yourself reacting? How do you imagine the future you would find yourself in? How well do you think you would reconcile the changes that would have occurred? How would you cope knowing that any connections you once had would no longer be? It would, in many ways, IMO, be like a rebirth.
note: While I find cryonics an interesting idea in and of itself (and certainly worthy of debate), this thread is not about its feasability or practical application. Rather, it is something of a leap into the imagination
Earlier this morning, perhaps as a substitute for Saturday morning cartoons, my partner and I watched an episode of "Next Generation," in which three characters had been frozen upon death, in the hope medical science would one day be able to revive them and cure any ills. And of cource the USS Enterprise found their capsule floating in space....
This got me to thinking....
Imagine this: You die tomorrow, you have your body frozen, and you are revived 400 years into the future. How do you imagine yourself reacting? How do you imagine the future you would find yourself in? How well do you think you would reconcile the changes that would have occurred? How would you cope knowing that any connections you once had would no longer be? It would, in many ways, IMO, be like a rebirth.
note: While I find cryonics an interesting idea in and of itself (and certainly worthy of debate), this thread is not about its feasability or practical application. Rather, it is something of a leap into the imagination