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Cryonics



 
 
Cryonics is the low-temperature preservation of human
Human

A human being, also human or man, is a member of a species of bipedalism primates in the family Hominidae . Mitochondrial DNA evidence indicates that modern humans originated in east Africa about 200,000 years ago....
s and animal
Animal

Animals are a major group of multicellular, eukaryotic organisms of the Kingdom Animalia or Metazoa. Their body plan eventually becomes fixed as they develop, although some undergo a process of metamorphosis later on in their life....
s that can no longer be sustained by contemporary medicine
Medicine

Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
 until resuscitation may be possible in the future. Currently, human cryopreservation
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
 is not reversible
Reversible reaction

A reversible reaction is a chemical reaction that results in an chemical equilibrium mixture of reactants and Product . For a reaction involving two reactants and two products this can be expressed symbolically asA and B can react to form C and D or, in the reverse reaction, C and D can react to form A and B....
, which means that it is not currently possible to bring people out of cryopreservation. The rationale for cryonics is that people who are dead by the current legal or medical definitions are not necessarily dead by the information-theoretic definition of death; and that people could be brought out of cryopreservation in the future.

In the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, cryonics can only be legally performed on humans after they have been pronounced legally dead
Legal death

Legal death is a legal pronouncement by a qualified person that further medical care is not appropriate and that a patient should be considered dead under the law....
.

The word cryonics is derived from the Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
 word ????? (kryos), meaning cold.






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Cryonics is the low-temperature preservation of human
Human

A human being, also human or man, is a member of a species of bipedalism primates in the family Hominidae . Mitochondrial DNA evidence indicates that modern humans originated in east Africa about 200,000 years ago....
s and animal
Animal

Animals are a major group of multicellular, eukaryotic organisms of the Kingdom Animalia or Metazoa. Their body plan eventually becomes fixed as they develop, although some undergo a process of metamorphosis later on in their life....
s that can no longer be sustained by contemporary medicine
Medicine

Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
 until resuscitation may be possible in the future. Currently, human cryopreservation
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
 is not reversible
Reversible reaction

A reversible reaction is a chemical reaction that results in an chemical equilibrium mixture of reactants and Product . For a reaction involving two reactants and two products this can be expressed symbolically asA and B can react to form C and D or, in the reverse reaction, C and D can react to form A and B....
, which means that it is not currently possible to bring people out of cryopreservation. The rationale for cryonics is that people who are dead by the current legal or medical definitions are not necessarily dead by the information-theoretic definition of death; and that people could be brought out of cryopreservation in the future.

In the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, cryonics can only be legally performed on humans after they have been pronounced legally dead
Legal death

Legal death is a legal pronouncement by a qualified person that further medical care is not appropriate and that a patient should be considered dead under the law....
.

The word cryonics is derived from the Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
 word ????? (kryos), meaning cold. Note that "cryonics" is often mistaken for the concept of suspended animation
Suspended animation

Suspended animation is the slowing of life processes by external means without termination. Breathing, heartbeat, and other involuntary functions may still occur, but they can only be detected by artificial means....
.

Premises of cryonics

The central premise of cryonics is that memory
Memory

In psychology, memory is an organism's mental ability to store, retain and recall information. Traditional studies of memory began in the fields of philosophy, including techniques of mnemonic....
, personality, and identity are stored in cellular structures and chemistry, principally in the brain
Brain

The brain is the center of the nervous system in all vertebrate, and most invertebrate, animals. Some primitive animals such as cnidarian and echinoderm have a decentralized nervous system without a brain, while sponges lack any nervous system at all....
. While this view is widely accepted in medicine, and brain activity is known to stop and later resume under certain conditions, it is not generally accepted that current methods preserve the brain well enough to permit revival in the future. Cryonics advocates point to studies showing that high concentrations of cryoprotectant
Cryoprotectant

A cryoprotectant is a substance that is used to protect biological tissue from freezing damage . Arctic and Antarctic insects, fish, amphibians and reptiles create cryoprotectants in their bodies to minimize freezing damage during cold winter periods....
 circulated through the brain before cooling can prevent structural damage from ice, preserving the fine cell
Cell (biology)

The cell is the structural and functional unit of all known Life organisms. It is the smallest unit of an organism that is classified as living, and is often called the building bricks of life....
 structures of the brain in which memory and identity presumably reside.

To its detractors, the justification for the actual practice of cryonics is unclear, given present limitations of preservation technology. Currently cells, tissues, blood vessels, and some small animal organs can be reversibly cryopreserved
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
. Some very small animals, such as water bears
Tardigrade

Tardigrades form the phylum Tardigrada, part of the superphylum Ecdysozoa. They are microscopic, water-dwelling, segmented animals with eight legs....
, can naturally survive preservation at cryogenic temperatures. Wood frogs can survive for a few months in a partially frozen state a few degrees below freezing, but this is not true cryopreservation. Cryonics advocates counter that demonstrably reversible preservation is not necessary to achieve the present-day goal of cryonics, which is preservation of basic brain information that encodes memory and personal identity. There is good reason to believe that current cryonics procedures can preserve the anatomical basis of mind. Preservation of this information is said to be sufficient to prevent information-theoretic death until future repairs might be possible.

Obstacles to success


Preservation injury

Long-term cryopreservation requires cooling to near , the boiling point
Boiling point

The boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the environmental pressure surrounding the liquid....
 of liquid nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen

Liquid nitrogen is a liquefied atmospheric gas produced industrially in large quantities by fractional distillation of liquid air. It is pure nitrogen in a liquid state at very low temperature....
. It is a common mistaken belief that cells will lyse (burst) due to the formation of ice crystals within the cell, but this only occurs if the freezing rate exceeds the osmotic loss of water to the extracellular space (and it is virtually impossible to cool a large tissue that quickly). However, damage from freezing can still be serious; ice may still form between cells, causing mechanical and chemical damage. Cryonics organizations use cryoprotectant
Cryoprotectant

A cryoprotectant is a substance that is used to protect biological tissue from freezing damage . Arctic and Antarctic insects, fish, amphibians and reptiles create cryoprotectants in their bodies to minimize freezing damage during cold winter periods....
s to reduce this damage. Cryoprotectant solutions are circulated through blood vessels to remove and replace water inside cells with chemicals that prevent freezing. This can reduce damage greatly, but freezing of whole people still causes injuries that are not reversible with present technology.

When used at high concentrations, cryoprotectants stop ice formation completely. Cooling and solidification without freezing is called vitrification
Vitrification

Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....
. The first cryoprotectant solutions able to vitrify at very slow cooling rates while still being compatible with tissue survival were developed in the late 1990s by cryobiologists
Cryobiology

Cryobiology is the branch of biology that studies the effects of low temperatures on living things. The word cryobiology is derived from the Greek words "cryo" = cold, "bios" = life, and "logos" = science....
 Gregory Fahy
Greg Fahy

Gregory M. Fahy, Ph.D. cryobiology, gerontology is Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer at Twenty-First Century Medicine, Inc. Dr. Fahy is the world's foremost expert in organ cryopreservation by vitrification....
 and Brian Wowk
Brian Wowk

Brian G. Wowk, Ph.D. is a medical physicist and cryobiology known for the discovery and development of syntheticmolecules that mimic the activity of natural antifreeze proteins in cryopreservation applications, sometimes called "ice blockers"....
 for the purpose of banking transplantable organs. These solutions were adopted for use in cryonics by the Alcor Life Extension Foundation
Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
, for which they are believed to permit vitrification
Vitrification

Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....
 of some parts of the human body, especially the brain. This has allowed animal brains to be vitrified, warmed back up, and examined for ice damage using light and electron microscopy
Electron microscope

An electron microscope is a type of microscope that uses a particle beam of electrons to illuminate a specimen and create a highly-magnified image....
. No ice crystal damage was found. The Cryonics Institute
Cryonics Institute

The Cryonics Institute is a member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation which provides cryonics services. CI is located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan, Michigan....
 also uses a vitrification solution developed by their staff cryobiologist, Dr. Yuri Pichugin, applying it principally to the brain.

Vitrification in cryonics is different than vitrification in mainstream cryobiology because vitrification in cryonics is not reversible with current technology. It is only structural vitrification. When successful it can prevent freezing injury in some body parts, but at the price of toxicity caused by cryoprotectant chemicals. The nature of this toxicity is still poorly understood. Cryonicists assume that toxicity is more subtle and repairable than obvious structural damage that would otherwise be caused by freezing. If, for example, toxicity is due to denatured
Denaturation (biochemistry)

Denaturation is a process in which proteins or nucleic acids lose their structure by application of some external stress or compound for example, treatment of proteins with strong acids or bases, high concentrations of inorganic salts, organic compound solvents , or heat....
 proteins, those proteins could be repaired or replaced.

Ischemic injury


Ischemia
Ischemia

In medicine, ischemia is a restriction in blood supply, generally due to factors in the blood vessels, with resultant damage or dysfunction of tissue....
 means inadequate or absent blood circulation that deprives tissue of oxygen and nutrients. At least several minutes of ischemia is a typical part of cryonics because of the common legal requirement that cryonics procedures do not begin until after blood circulation stops. The heart must stop beating so that legal death
Legal death

Legal death is a legal pronouncement by a qualified person that further medical care is not appropriate and that a patient should be considered dead under the law....
 can be declared. When there is advance notice of impending clinical death, it is sometimes possible to deploy a team of technicians to perform a “standby”. The team artificially restores blood circulation and breathing using techniques similar to CPR as soon as possible after the heart stops. The aim is to keep tissues alive after legal death by analogy to conventional medical procedures in which viable organs and tissues are obtained for transplant from legally deceased donors. Legal death does not mean that all the cells of the body have died.

Often in cryonics the brain is without oxygen for many minutes at warm temperatures, or even hours if the heart stops unexpectedly. This causes ischemic injury to the brain and other tissues that makes resuscitation impossible by present medical technology. Cryonicists justify preservation under such conditions by noting recent advances that allow brain resuscitation after longer periods of ischemia than the traditional 4 to 6 minute limit, and persistence of brain structure and even some brain cell function after long periods of clinical death. They argue that definitions of death change as technology advances, and the early stages of what is called “death” today is actually a form of ischemic injury that will be reversible in the future. They claim that personal survival during long periods of clinical death is determined by information theoretic criteria.

Revival

Those who believe that revival may someday be possible generally look toward advanced bioengineering
Bioengineering

Bioengineering is the application of engineering principles to address challenges in the fields of biology and medicine. As a study, it encompasses biomedical engineering and it is related to biotechnology....
, molecular nanotechnology
Molecular nanotechnology

Molecular nanotechnology is the concept of engineering functional mechanical systems at the molecular scale. An equivalent definition would be "machines at the molecular scale designed and built atom-by-atom"....
, nanomedicine
Nanomedicine

Nanomedicine is the medicine application of nanotechnology. The approaches to nanomedicine range from the medical use of nanomaterials, to Nanoelectronics biosensors, and even possible future applications of molecular nanotechnology....
, or mind uploading as key technologies. Revival requires repairing damage from lack of oxygen, cryoprotectant toxicity, thermal stress (fracturing), freezing in tissues that do not successfully vitrify, and reversing the effects that caused the patient's death. In many cases extensive tissue regeneration
Regeneration (biology)

In biology, an organism is said to regenerate a lost or damaged part if the part regrows so that the original function is restored.Regenerative capacity is inversely related to complexity: in general, the more complex an animal is the less regeneration it is capable of....
 will be necessary. Hypothetical revival scenarios generally envision repairs being performed by vast numbers of microscopic organisms or devices. These devices would restore healthy cell structure and chemistry at the molecular level, ideally before warming. More radically, mind transfer
Mind transfer

In transhumanism and science fiction, mind uploading refers to the hypothetical transfer of a human mind to a substrate different from a biological brain, such as a detailed computer simulation of an individual human brain....
 has also been suggested as a possible revival approach if and when technology is ever developed to scan the memory contents of a preserved brain.

It has often been written that cryonics revival will be a last-in-first-out process. In this view, preservation methods will get progressively better until eventually they are demonstrably reversible, after which medicine will begin to reach back and revive people cryopreserved by more primitive methods. Revival of people cryopreserved by the current combination of neurovitrification
Neurovitrification

Neurovitrification is the term that refers to vitrification of only the human brain , usually with the intention of neuropreservation. The term is used in cryonics....
 and deep-cooling (technically not "freezing", as cryoprotectant inhibits ice crystallization) may require centuries, if it is possible at all.

It has been claimed that if technologies for general molecular analysis and repair are ever developed, then theoretically any damaged body could be “revived.” Survival would then depend on whether preserved brain information was sufficient to permit restoration of all or part of the personal identity of the original person, with amnesia
Amnčsia

Amn?sia is an Italian language drama film directed by Gabriele Salvatores in 2002 in film.External links...
 being the final dividing line between life and death.

Neuropreservation

Neuropreservation
Neuropreservation

Neuropreservation is cryopreservation of the human brain with the intention of future resuscitation and regrowth of a healthy body around the brain....
 is cryopreservation of the brain, often within the head, with surgical removal and disposal (usually cremation) of the rest of the body. Neuropreservation, sometimes called “neuro,” is one of two distinct preservation options in cryonics, the other being "whole body" preservation. In some neuropreservation cases, only the brain is cryopreserved. This can come about because the cryonics practitioner chooses to preserve just the brain or where the brain has been removed by a medical examiner as part of autopsy procedures.

Neuropreservation is motivated by the brain
Brain

The brain is the center of the nervous system in all vertebrate, and most invertebrate, animals. Some primitive animals such as cnidarian and echinoderm have a decentralized nervous system without a brain, while sponges lack any nervous system at all....
's role as the primary repository of memory and personal identity. (For instance, spinal cord injury victims, organ transplant patients, and amputees retain their personal identity.) It is also motivated by the belief that reversing any type of cryonic preservation is so difficult and complex that any future technology capable of it must by its nature be capable of generalized tissue regeneration
Regeneration (biology)

In biology, an organism is said to regenerate a lost or damaged part if the part regrows so that the original function is restored.Regenerative capacity is inversely related to complexity: in general, the more complex an animal is the less regeneration it is capable of....
, including growth of a new body around a repaired brain. Some suggested revival scenarios for whole body patients even involve discarding the original body and regenerating a new one because tissues are so badly damaged by the preservation process. These considerations, along with lower costs, easier transportation in emergencies, and the specific focus on brain preservation quality, have motivated many cryonicists to choose neuropreservation.

The advantages and disadvantages of neuropreservation are often debated among cryonics advocates. Critics of neuropreservation note that the body is a record of much life experience, including learned motor skills (muscle memory
Muscle memory

Muscle memory is a common term for neuromuscular facilitation, which is the process of the neuromuscular system memorizing motor skills....
). While few cryonicists doubt that a revived neuro patient would be the same person, there are wider questions about how a regenerated body might feel different from the original. Partly for these reasons (as well as for better public relations), the Cryonics Institute
Cryonics Institute

The Cryonics Institute is a member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation which provides cryonics services. CI is located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan, Michigan....
 preserves only whole bodies. Some proponents of neuropreservation agree with these concerns, but still feel that lower costs and better brain preservation justify concentrating preservation efforts on the brain. About three-quarters of the patients stored at Alcor are neuropreservation patients. Although the American Cryonics Society
American Cryonics Society

The American Cryonics Society is a member-run, California-based, 501 Tax exemption non-profit corporation that supports and promotes research and education into cryonics and cryobiology....
 no longer offers the neuropreservation option, about half of the American Cryonic Society’s patients are "neuros".

Financial issues

Costs of cryonics vary greatly, ranging from $28,000 for cryopreservation by the Cryonics Institute, to $155,000 for whole body cryopreservation for the American Cryonics Society’s most expensive plan.

Alcor’s whole body preservation is priced at $150,000 (or $80,000 for neuropreservation of the head alone) plus a ~$500 annual membership fee during life by Alcor
Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
. After payment of an initiaton fee, ACS full members pay an annual fee of $300 currently.

To some extent these cost differences reflect differences in how fees are quoted. The Cryonics Institute
Cryonics Institute

The Cryonics Institute is a member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation which provides cryonics services. CI is located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan, Michigan....
 fee doesn’t include “standby” (a team that begins procedures at bedside), transportation costs, or funeral director expenses outside of Michigan, which must be purchased as extras. CI Members wanting Standby and Transport from cryonics professionals can contract for additional payment to the Florida
Florida

Florida is a U.S. state located in the Southeastern United States of the United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the northeast....
-based company Suspended Animation, Inc.

While cryonics is sometimes suspected of being greatly profitable, the high expenses of doing cryonics are well documented. The expenses are comparable to major transplant surgeries. The largest single expense, especially for whole body cases, is the money that must be set aside to generate interest to pay for maintenance in perpetuity.

The most common method of paying for cryonics is life insurance
Life insurance

Life insurance or life assurance is a contract between the policy owner and the insurance, where the insurer agrees to pay a sum of money upon the occurrence of the insured individual's or individuals' death or other event, such as terminal illness or critical illness....
, which spreads the cost over many years. Cryonics advocates are quick to point out that such insurance is especially affordable for young people. It has been claimed that cryonics is “affordable for the vast majority” of people in the industrialized world who really want it and plan for it in advance.

Philosophical and ethical considerations

Cryonics is based on a view of dying as a process that can be stopped in the minutes, and perhaps hours, following clinical death
Clinical death

Clinical death is the popular term for cessation of blood circulation and breathing. It occurs when the heart stops beating in a regular rhythm, a condition called cardiac arrest....
. If death
Death

Death is the permanent termination of the biological functions that define a life organism. It refers to both a particular event and to the condition that results thereby....
 is not an event that happens suddenly when the heart stops, this raises philosophical questions about what exactly death is. In 2005 an ethics debate in the medical journal, Critical Care, noted “…few if any patients pronounced dead by today’s physicians are in fact truly dead by any scientifically rigorous criteria.” Cryonics proponent Thomas Donaldson
Thomas K. Donaldson

Thomas K. Donaldson was a mathematician and well-known cryonics advocate. He was born in the state of Kentucky in the United States, and took his Ph.D....
 has argued that “death” based on cardiac arrest
Cardiac arrest

A cardiac arrest, also known as cardiopulmonary arrest or circulatory arrest, is the abrupt cessation of normal circulation of the blood due to failure of the heart to contract effectively during Systole ....
 or resuscitation failure is a purely social construction used to justify terminating care of dying patients. In this view, legal death
Legal death

Legal death is a legal pronouncement by a qualified person that further medical care is not appropriate and that a patient should be considered dead under the law....
 and its aftermath are a form of euthanasia
Euthanasia

Euthanasia refers to the practice of ending a life in a painless manner. Many different forms of euthanasia can be distinguished, including euthanasia and human euthanasia, and within the latter, voluntary and involuntary euthanasia....
 in which sick people are abandoned. Philosopher Max More
Max More

Max More is a philosophy and futurists who writes, speaks, and consults on advanced decision-making about emerging technologies.Born in Bristol, England, More has a degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics from St Anne's College, Oxford, Oxford University ....
 suggested a distinction between death associated with circumstances and intention versus death that is absolutely irreversible. Absolutely irreversible death has also been called information-theoretic death, which implies destruction of the brain to such an extent that the original information content can no longer be recovered. Bioethicist James Hughes has written that increasing rights will accrue to cryonics patients as prospects for revival become clearer, noting that recovery of legally dead persons has precedent in the discovery of missing persons.

Ethical and theological opinions of cryonics tend to pivot on the issue of whether cryonics is regarded as interment or medicine
Medicine

Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
. If cryonics is interment, then religious beliefs about death and afterlife
Afterlife

The afterlife is the concept of a continued existence for the soul, spirit or mind of a being after biological death. The major views on the afterlife derive from religion, esotericism and metaphysics....
 may come into consideration. Resuscitation may be deemed impossible by those with religious beliefs because the soul
Soul

In many religions and parts of philosophy, the soul is the immaterial part of a person. It is usually thought to consist of one's thoughts and Personality psychology, and can be synonymous with the spirit, mind or self....
 is gone, and according to most religions only God
God

God is a deity in theism and deism religions and other belief systems, representing either the sole deity in monotheism, or a principal deity in polytheism....
 can resurrect the dead. Cryonics advocates complain that theological dismissal of cryonics because it is interment is a circular argument because calling cryonics "interment" presumes a priori
A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)

The terms "a priori" and "a posteriori" are used in philosophy to distinguish two types of knowledge, justifications or arguments....
 that cryonics cannot work. They believe future technical advances will validate their view that cryonics patients are recoverable, and therefore never really dead. If cryonics is regarded as medicine, with legal death
Legal death

Legal death is a legal pronouncement by a qualified person that further medical care is not appropriate and that a patient should be considered dead under the law....
 as a mere enabling mechanism, then cryonics is a long-term coma
Coma

In medicine, a coma is a profound state of unconsciousness. A comatose person cannot be awakened, fails to respond normally to pain or light, does not have sleep-wake cycles, and does not take voluntary actions....
 with uncertain prognosis. It is continuing to care for sick people when others have given up.

Alcor has published a vigorous Christian defense of cryonics, including excerpts of a sermon by Lutheran Reverend Kay Glaesner. Noted Christian commentator John Warwick Montgomery
John Warwick Montgomery

John Warwick Montgomery was born October 18, 1931 in Warsaw, New York. In 2007 he was named "Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Christian Thought" at Patrick Henry College....
 has defended cryonics. In 1969, a Roman Catholic priest consecrated the cryonics capsule of Ann DeBlasio, one of the first cryonics patients. Many followers of Nikolai Fyodorovich Fyodorov
Nikolai Fyodorovich Fyodorov

Nikolai Fyodorovich Fyodorov was a Russian Eastern Orthodox Church philosopher, who was part of the Russian cosmism movement and a precursor of transhumanism....
 see cryonics as an important step in the Common Cause project (reference: Fedorov seminar in Moscow, Russia on 25.11.2006) and compatible with Orthodox Christianity
Eastern Orthodox Church

The Eastern Orthodox Church is the second largest single Christian communion in the world with an estimated 225 million members worldwide. It is considered by its adherents to be the Four Marks of the Church established by Jesus Christ and his Apostles nearly 2000 years ago....
.

At the request of the American Cryonics Society, in 1995, Philosopher Charles Tandy, Ph.D.

authored a paper entitled “Cryonic-Hibernation in Light of the Bioethical Principles of Beauchamp and Childress.” Dr. Tandy considered the four bioethical factors or principles articulated by philosophers Beauchamp and Childress as they apply to cryonics. These four principles are 1) respect for autonomy; 2) nonmaleficence; 3) beneficence; and 4) justice. Tandy concluded that in respect to all four principles “biomedical professionals have a strong (not weak) and actual (not prima facie, but binding) obligation to help insure cryonic-hibernation of the cryonics patient.”

History

Benjamin Franklin
Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States of the United States. A noted polymath, Franklin was a leading author and Printer , Satire, list of political philosophers, politician, scientist, inventor, activism, statesman, and diplomacy....
 suggested in a famous 1773 letter that it might be possible to preserve human life in a suspended state
Suspended animation

Suspended animation is the slowing of life processes by external means without termination. Breathing, heartbeat, and other involuntary functions may still occur, but they can only be detected by artificial means....
 for centuries. However, the modern era of cryonics began in 1962 when Michigan college physics teacher Robert Ettinger
Robert Ettinger

Robert Chester Wilson Ettinger is known as "the Father#Philosophical fatherhood of cryonics" due to the impact of his 1962 book The Prospect of Immortality....
 proposed in a privately published book, “The Prospect of Immortality”, that freezing people may be a way to reach future medical technology. Even though freezing a person is apparently fatal, Ettinger argued that what appears to be fatal today may be reversible in the future. He applied the same argument to the process of dying itself, saying that the early stages of clinical death
Clinical death

Clinical death is the popular term for cessation of blood circulation and breathing. It occurs when the heart stops beating in a regular rhythm, a condition called cardiac arrest....
 may be reversible in the future. Combining these two ideas, he suggested that freezing recently deceased people may be a way to save lives.

Slightly before Ettinger’s book was complete, Evan Cooper (writing as Nathan Duhring) privately published a book called Immortality: Physically, Scientifically, Now that independently suggested the same idea. Cooper founded the Life Extension Society (LES) in 1964 to promote freezing people. Ettinger came to be credited as the originator of cryonics, perhaps because his book was republished by Doubleday in 1964 on recommendation of Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov , was a Russian-born United States author and professor of biochemistry, best known for his works of science fiction and for his popular science books....
 and Fred Pohl, and received more publicity. Ettinger also stayed with the movement longer. Nevertheless, cryonics historian R. Michael Perry has written “Evan Cooper deserves the principal credit for forming an organized cryonics movement.”

Cooper’s Life Extension Society became the seed tree for cryonics societies throughout the country where local cryonics advocates would get together as a result of contact through the LES mailing list. The actual word “cryonics” was invented by Karl Werner in 1965 in conjunction with the founding of the Cryonics Society of New York (CSNY) by Curtis Henderson
Curtis Henderson

Curtis Henderson was a pioneer in the practice of cryonics....
 and Saul Kent
Saul Kent

Saul Kent is a prominent life extension activist, and co-founder of the Life Extension Foundation, a major dietary supplement vendor and promoter of anti-aging research....
 that same year. This was followed by the founding of the Cryonics Society of Michigan (CSM) and Cryonics Society of California (CSC) in 1966, and Bay Area Cryonics Society (BACS) in 1969 (renamed the American Cryonics Society
American Cryonics Society

The American Cryonics Society is a member-run, California-based, 501 Tax exemption non-profit corporation that supports and promotes research and education into cryonics and cryobiology....
, or ACS, in 1985). Neither CSNY nor CSC are currently in operation. CSM eventually became the Immortalist Society, a non-profit affiliate of the Cryonics Institute
Cryonics Institute

The Cryonics Institute is a member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation which provides cryonics services. CI is located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan, Michigan....
 (CI), a cryonics service organization founded by Ettinger in 1976. CI now has more cryonics patients than any other organization.

Although there was at least one earlier aborted case, it is generally accepted that the first person frozen with intent of future resuscitation was Dr. James Bedford, a 73-year-old psychology professor frozen under crude conditions by CSC on January 12, 1967. The case made the cover of a limited print run of Life Magazine before the presses were stopped to report the death of three astronauts in the Apollo 1
Apollo 1

Apollo 1 is the official name that was later given to the never-flown Apollo/Saturn 204 mission. Its command module was destroyed by fire during a test and training exercise on January 27 1967 at Pad 34 atop a Saturn IB rocket....
 fire instead.

Cryonics suffered a major setback in 1979 when it was discovered that nine bodies stored by CSC in a cemetery in Chatsworth, California, thawed due to depletion of funds. Some of the bodies had apparently thawed years earlier without notification. The head of CSC was sued, and negative publicity slowed cryonics growth for years afterward. Of seventeen documented cryonics cases between 1967 and 1973, only James Bedford remains cryopreserved
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
 today. Strict financial controls and requirements adopted in response to the Chatsworth scandal have resulted in the successful maintenance of almost all cryonics cases since that era.

The largest cryonics organization today, in terms of membership, was established by Fred and Linda Chamberlain
Fred and Linda Chamberlain

Frederick Rockwell Chamberlain III and his wife Linda are the wiktionary:Founders of the cryonics organization Alcor Life Extension Foundation. Their long and continued history of activism in cryonics make them among the most well-known cryonics pioneers....
 in 1972 as the Alcor Society for Solid State Hypothermia (ALCOR). In 1977 the name was changed to the Alcor Life Extension Foundation
Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
. In 1982, the Institute for Advanced Biological Studies (IABS) founded by Mike Darwin
Mike Darwin

Michael G. Darwin, who is an American, was the president of the cryonics organization Alcor Life Extension Foundation from 1983 to 1988, and Research Director until 1992....
 and Steve Bridge in Indiana merged with Alcor. During the 1980s Darwin worked with UCLA cardiothoracic surgery researcher Jerry Leaf
Jerry Leaf

Jerry D. Leaf was Vice President of the cryonics organization Alcor Life Extension Foundation, and President of the cryonics service firm Cryovita, Inc., until his cryopreservation by Alcor Life Extension Foundation following a fatal heart attack in 1991....
 at Alcor to develop a medical model for cryonics procedures. They pioneered the first consistent use of a cryonics procedure now known as a “standby”, in which a team waits to begin life support procedures at the bedside of a cryonics patient as soon as possible after the heart stops.

The oldest incorporated cryonics society still extant is the American Cryonics Society
American Cryonics Society

The American Cryonics Society is a member-run, California-based, 501 Tax exemption non-profit corporation that supports and promotes research and education into cryonics and cryobiology....
 (ACS). This tax-exempt
Tax exemption

A tax exemption is an exemption from all or certain taxes of a state or nation in which part of the taxes that would normally be collected from an individual or an organization are instead foregone....
 501(c)(3) membership organization was incorporated in 1969 as the Bay Area Cryonics Society (BACS) by a group of cryonics advocates that included two prominent Bay Area physicians, Dr. M. Coleman Harris and Dr. Grace Talbot. The first suspensions under BACS auspices were performed in 1974 by Trans Time, Inc., a for-profit company started by BACS members. BACS researcher Dr. Paul Segall, working with Jerry Leaf of CryoVita, developed a medical model to induce hypothermia shortly after pronouncement of death. Dr. Segall later went on to pioneer blood substitutes for use in both cryonic suspension and in mainstream medicine.

Cryonics received new support in the 1980s when MIT engineer Eric Drexler started publishing papers and books foreseeing the new field of molecular nanotechnology
Molecular nanotechnology

Molecular nanotechnology is the concept of engineering functional mechanical systems at the molecular scale. An equivalent definition would be "machines at the molecular scale designed and built atom-by-atom"....
. His 1986 book, Engines of Creation
Engines of Creation

Engines of Creation is a molecular nanotechnology book written by K. Eric Drexler in 1986. The foreword is by Marvin Minsky of MIT. Engines of Creation has been translated into Japanese, French, Spanish, Italian, Russian, and Chinese....
, included an entire chapter on cryonics applications. Cryonics advocates saw the nascent field of nanotechnology as vindication of their long held view that molecular repair of injured tissue was theoretically possible. In the late 1980s Alcor member Dick Clair
Dick Clair

Dick Clair was an United States television producer, actor and television and film writer, best known the television sitcoms It's a Living , The Facts of Life , and Mama's Family....
 (who was dying of AIDS) sued for, and ultimately won for everyone, the right to be cryonically preserved in the State of California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
. Alcor’s
Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
 membership expanded tenfold within a decade, with a 30% annual growth rate between 1988 and 1992.

Alcor
Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
 was disrupted by political turmoil in 1993 when a group of activists left to start the CryoCare Foundation, and associated for-profit companies CryoSpan, Inc. (headed by Paul Wakfer) and BioPreservation, Inc. (headed by Mike Darwin
Mike Darwin

Michael G. Darwin, who is an American, was the president of the cryonics organization Alcor Life Extension Foundation from 1983 to 1988, and Research Director until 1992....
). Darwin and collaborators made many technical advances during this time period, including a landmark study documenting high quality brain preservation by freezing with high concentrations of glycerol. CryoCare ceased operations in 1999 when they were unable to renew their service contract with BioPreservation. CryoCare’s two patients stored at CryoSpan were transferred to Alcor. Several ACS patients stored at CryoSpan were transferred to CI.

There have been numerous, often transient, for-profit companies involved in cryonics. For-profit companies were often paired or affiliated with non-profit groups they served. Some of these companies, with non-profits they served in parentheses, were Cryonic Interment, Inc. (CSC), Cryo-Span Corporation (CSNY), Cryo-Care Equipment Corporation (CSC and CSNY), Manrise Corporation (Alcor), CryoVita, Inc. (Alcor), BioTransport, Inc. (Alcor), Trans Time, Inc. (BACS), Soma, Inc. (IABS), CryoSpan, Inc. (CryoCare and ACS), BioPreservation, Inc. (CryoCare and ACS), Kryos, Inc. (ACS), Suspended Animation, Inc. (CI, ACS, and Alcor). Trans Time and Suspended Animation are the only for-profit cryonics organizations that still exist. Apparently none of the companies were ever profitable.

The cryonics field seems to have largely consolidated around three non-profit groups, Alcor, Cryonics Institute (CI), and the American Cryonics Society (ACS), all deriving significant income from bequests and donations. A newly formed non-profit group called the Cryonics Society
Cryonics Society

The Cryonics Society is a registered 5013 non-profit organization and is the only registered nonprofit organization in the world dedicated solely to educating and informing the public about the emerging medical technology known as cryonics....
 was formally incorporated in 2006 but is devoted solely to promotion and public education of the cryonics concept.

As research in the 1990s revealed in greater detail the damaging effects of freezing, there was a trend to use higher concentrations of glycerol cryoprotectant
Cryoprotectant

A cryoprotectant is a substance that is used to protect biological tissue from freezing damage . Arctic and Antarctic insects, fish, amphibians and reptiles create cryoprotectants in their bodies to minimize freezing damage during cold winter periods....
 to prevent freezing injury. In 2001 Alcor began using vitrification
Vitrification

Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....
, a technology borrowed from mainstream organ preservation research, in an attempt to completely prevent ice formation during cooling. Initially the technology could only be applied to the head when separated from the body. In 2005 Alcor began treating the whole body with their vitrification
Vitrification

Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....
 solution in a procedure called "neurovitrification with whole body cryoprotection". In the same year, the Cryonics Institute began treating the head of their whole body patients with their own vitrification solution.

The Cryonics Institute maintains 87 human patients (along with about 52 pets) at its Clinton Township
Clinton Charter Township, Michigan

The Charter Township of Clinton, usually referred to as Clinton Township, is a charter township of Macomb County, Michigan in the U.S. state of Michigan....
, Michigan
Michigan

Michigan is a Midwestern United States U.S. state of the United States of America. It was named after Lake Michigan, whose name is a French adaptation of the Anishinaabe language term mishigama, meaning "large water" or "large lake"....
 facility. A significant number of these cryopreserved humans and pets came to the CI facility through contract with the American Cryonics Society. Alcor currently maintains 80 cryonics patients in Scottsdale, Arizona. There are support groups in Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
, Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
, and Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. There is also a small cryonics facility in Russia storing four neuropatients called KrioRus
KrioRus

KrioRus is the first Russian cryonics company. Established in 2005 by Danila Medvedev, it is the first cryonics company outside the United States....
, and plans for a facility in Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. There are also plans for a multi-acre facility to be built in an undisclosed location in the United States. This facility is to be named Timeship and will be built along a futuristic design emphasizing security and safety developed by renowned architect Stephen Valentine.

Culture


Cryonics in popular culture

Procedures similar to cryonics have been featured in innumerable science fiction
Science fiction

Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
 stories to aid space travel, or as means to transport a character from the past into the future. In addition to accomplishing whatever the character's primary task is in the future, he or she must cope with the strangeness of a new world, which may contain only traces of their previous surroundings. This prospect of alienation is often cited as a major reason for the unpopularity of cryonics.

Notable early science fiction short stories featuring human cryopreservation, deliberate or accidental, include Jack London's first published work "A Thousand Deaths
A Thousand Deaths

"A Thousand Deaths" is an 1899 short story by Jack London, and is notable as his first work to be published. It has as its theme the deliberate experimentally induced death and resuscitation/resurrection of the protagonist, by a mad scientist who uses multiple scientific methods for these experiments....
" (1899), H.P. Lovecraft's "Cool Air
Cool Air

"Cool Air" is a short story by the American literature horror fiction writer H. P. Lovecraft, written in March 1926 in literature and published in the March 1928 in literature issue of Tales of Magic and Mystery....
" (1928), and Edgar Rice Burroughs' "The Resurrection of Jimber-Jaw
The Resurrection of Jimber-Jaw

The Resurrection of Jimber-Jaw is a 1937 short story by Edgar Rice Burroughs about an unfrozen 50,000 year-old caveman and his politically-incorrect views....
" (1937). In the 1846 short story "Hilda Silfverling, A Fantasy" by Lydia Maria Child, the main character is preserved by cryonics and revived after the passage of a hundred years. Many of the subjects in these stories are unwilling ones, although a 1931 short story by Neil R. Jones
Neil R. Jones

Neil Ronald Jones was an American author who worked for the state of New York. Not prolific, and little remembered today, Jones was ground?breaking in science fiction....
 called "The Jameson Satellite", in which the subject has himself deliberately preserved in space after death, has been credited with giving Robert Ettinger
Robert Ettinger

Robert Chester Wilson Ettinger is known as "the Father#Philosophical fatherhood of cryonics" due to the impact of his 1962 book The Prospect of Immortality....
 the seed of the idea of cryonics, when he was a teenager. Ettinger would later write a science fiction story called The Penultimate Trump published in 1948, in which the explicit idea of cryopreservation of legally-dead persons for future repair of medical causes of death, is promulgated.

Relatively few stories have been published concerning the primary objective and definition of cryonics. Influential novels with this theme include the early The Door Into Summer
The Door into Summer

The Door into Summer is a science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein, originally serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and 1957 in literature....
 by Robert A. Heinlein
Robert A. Heinlein

Robert Anson Heinlein was an United States novelist and science fiction writer. Often called "the dean of science fiction writers", he is one of the most popular, influential, and controversial authors of the genre....
 (1956), The Age of the Pussyfoot
The Age of the Pussyfoot

The Age of the Pussyfoot is a science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl, first published as a novel in 1969. It was originally published as a Serial in Galaxy Science Fiction in three parts, starting in October 1966....
 (1966) by Fred Pohl and Ubik
Ubik

Ubik is a 1969 in literature science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. In 2005, Time named it one of the one hundred greatest English-language novels published since 1923....
 by Philip K. Dick
Philip K. Dick

Philip Kindred Dick was an United States science fiction novelist, short story writer, and essayist. Dick explored sociological, political and metaphysics themes in novels dominated by monopoly corporations, Authoritarianism, and altered states of consciousness....
 (1969). Also included are national best-seller The First Immortal
The First Immortal

The First Immortal is a fiction book written by James L. Halperin, about the first man re-animated after a cryonics procedure. Published by Del Rey Books books, copyright 1998....
 by James Halperin, Tomorrow and Tomorrow
Tomorrow and Tomorrow

Tomorrow and Tomorrow is a 1997 in literature science fiction novel by Charles Sheffield. The book starts in approximately the year 2020 and follows the extremely protracted adventures of Drake Merlin, in his obsessive quest to save his wife from a terminal brain disease, over the course of eons....
 by Charles Sheffield
Charles Sheffield

Charles Sheffield , was an England-born mathematician, physicist and science fiction author. He had been a President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and of the American Astronomical Society....
, Chiller by Sterling Blake (aka Gregory Benford
Gregory Benford

Gregory Benford is an American science fiction authors and astrophysicist who is on the faculty of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of California, Irvine....
), Ralph’s Journey by David Pizer, Formerly Brandewyne by Jude Liebermann, and I Was a Teenage Popsicle by Bev Katz Rosenbaum. A fictional book about cryonics specifically for children is 21st Century Kids by Shannon Vyff.

Domovoi Butler from the Artemis Fowl
Artemis Fowl (series)

Artemis Fowl is a series of fantasy novels written by Irish author Eoin Colfer, starring the teenage criminal mastermind Artemis Fowl II. The series is written in half-serious language, alternating dark moments with humorous ones, a style favoured by a number of popular children's authors....
 series was frozen after his death and kept frozen over night in the third book, thereafter being revived by fairy magic.

Fictional application of cryonics as rescue after freezing in space has continued since The Jameson Satellite in 1931. Arthur C. Clarke
Arthur C. Clarke

Sri Lankabhimanya Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, Order of the British Empire was a British people science fiction author, inventor, and Futurology, most famous for the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey , written in collaboration with director Stanley Kubrick, a collaboration which also produced the 2001: A Space Odyssey ; and as a host and comment...
's 3001: The Final Odyssey
3001: The Final Odyssey

3001: The Final Odyssey is a science fiction novel by Arthur C. Clarke. It is the fourth and final book in the The Space Odyssey series series....
 reveals that Frank Poole
Frank Poole

Frank Poole is a fictional character from Arthur C. Clarke's The Space Odyssey series series. In Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey , Poole was portrayed by Gary Lockwood....
, murdered by HAL 9000
HAL 9000

HAL 9000 is a fictional computer in Arthur C. Clarke's Space Odyssey saga. The novels, along with two films, begin with 2001: A Space Odyssey, released in 1968....
 in 2001: A Space Odyssey was cryopreserved by his exposure to space, and found and revived a thousand years later. The Larry Niven
Larry Niven

Laurence van Cott Niven is a US science fiction author. Perhaps his best-known work is Ringworld , which received Hugo Award for Best Novel, Locus Award, Ditmar Award, and Nebula Award for Best Novel awards....
 short story "Wait It Out" depicts a sort of emergency self-cryopreservation by men marooned on Pluto. The 1992 Hugo-winning novel A Fire Upon the Deep
A Fire Upon the Deep

A Fire Upon the Deep is a science fiction novel written by Vernor Vinge, an award-winning space opera about superhuman intelligences, well-developed Extraterrestrial life, variable physics, space battles, love, betrayal, genocide, and Usenet....
 by Vernor Vinge
Vernor Vinge

Vernor Steffen Vinge is a retired San Diego State University Professor of Mathematics, computer science, and science fiction author. He is best known for his Hugo Award-winning novels and novellas A Fire Upon the Deep , A Deepness in the Sky , Rainbows End , Fast Times at Fairmont High and The Cookie Monster , as well...
 features a protagonist who is resuscitated by a superintelligence, thousands of years after a spaceship accident. The popular Halo hero John-117
Master Chief (Halo)

Master Chief Petty Officer John-117, commonly called the Master Chief, is a Character and the main protagonist of the Halo Fictional universe, created by Bungie Studios, and is a Player character in the trilogy of science fiction first-person shooter video games Halo: Combat Evolved, Halo 2, and Halo 3....
 was also cryogenically frozen for some time.

Movies featuring cryonics for medical purposes include the Woody Allen
Woody Allen

Woody Allen is an Cinema of the United States film director, writer, actor, comedian, musician and playwright.Allen's distinctive films, which run the gamut from dramas to Screwball comedy film, have made him one of the most respected living American directors....
 comedy, Sleeper
Sleeper (film)

Sleeper is a futuristic science fiction comedy film, written by, directed by, and starring Woody Allen. It is loosely based on the H. G. Wells novel The Sleeper Awakes....
, and the films Late for Dinner, Abre los Ojos
Abre los ojos

Open Your Eyes is a 1998 in film film directed by Alejandro Amen?bar and written by him and Mateo Gil. It stars Eduardo Noriega , Pen?lope Cruz, Fele Mart?nez and Najwa Nimri....
 (remade as Vanilla Sky
Vanilla Sky

Vanilla Sky is a 2001 United States psychological thriller film, which has been variously characterized by published film critics as "an odd mixture of science fiction, Romance film, and reality warp", "part Beautiful People fantasy, part New Age investigation of the Great Beyond", a "love story, a struggle for the soul, or an Existential...
) and Wes Craven's Chiller
Wes Craven's Chiller

Chiller, or as it is sometimes known Wes Craven's Chiller, was a horror movie/thriller released in 1985....
. One of the most famous movies regarding a cryonics-like process was 1992's Forever Young
Forever Young (film)

Forever Young is a 1992 in film film, directed by Steve Miner, starring Mel Gibson, Elijah Wood and Jamie Lee Curtis. The screenplay was written by J.J....
, starring Mel Gibson. Although not about cryonics per se, the Ron Howard
Ron Howard

Ronald William "Ron" Howard is an Academy Award-winning American film director and film producer as well as an actor. Howard came to prominence in the 1960s while playing Andy Griffith's TV son, Opie Taylor, on The Andy Griffith Show , and later in the 1970s as Howard Cunningham's son and Arthur Fonzarelli's best friend, Richie Cunningha...
 film Cocoon
Cocoon (film)

Cocoon is a 1985 science fiction film directed by Ron Howard, about a group of elderly people who are rejuvenated by aliens. The movie starred Don Ameche, Wilford Brimley, Hume Cronyn, Brian Dennehy, Jack Gilford, Steve Guttenberg, Maureen Stapleton, Jessica Tandy, Gwen Verdon, Herta Ware, Tahnee Welch, and Linda Harrison....
 has been hailed by cryonics advocates as expressing the values motivating cryonics better than any other film.

Cryonics is featured in the movies Alien
Alien (film)

Alien is a 1979 science fiction film/horror film directed by Ridley Scott and starring Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver, Veronica Cartwright, Harry Dean Stanton, John Hurt, Ian Holm and Yaphet Kotto....
 and Aliens
Aliens (film)

Aliens is a 1986 science fiction film/action film directed by James Cameron and starring Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, Lance Henriksen, and Bill Paxton....
 where the ships crew enter "cryo-sleep" so they can travel through space great distances without aging. A form of "cryo-stasis" is featured in the film Demolition Man
Demolition Man (film)

Demolition Man is a 1993 in film Cinema of the United States dystopian action film directed by Marco Brambilla, and starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock, Nigel Hawthorne and Denis Leary....
 where criminals are frozen in a "Cryo-penitentiary" and given neural implants to alter their characters and remove violent tendencies. More recently cryonics has featured in the Austin Powers
Austin Powers (film series)

The Austin Powers series is a series of comedy films written and produced by and stars Mike Myers as the Austin Powers, directed by Jay Roach and distributed by New Line Cinema....
 spoof
Parody

A parody , in contemporary usage, is a work created to mock, comment on, or poke fun at an original work, its subject, or author, or some other target, by means of humorous, satiric or ironic imitation....
 series of films where Dr. Evil
Dr. Evil

Dr. Evil is a fictional character, played by Mike Myers , in the Austin Powers series film series. He is the chief villain of the movies, and Austin Powers' nemesis with aspirations of world domination....
 and Austin Powers
Austin Powers

Sir Austin Danger Powers, Order of the British Empire, is a fictional character from the Austin Powers series of films. He first appeared in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and is portrayed by Mike Myers ....
 were both cryonically frozen between the 1960s and the 1990s. During the freezing process, Dr. Evil's cat, Mr. Bigglesworth, went completely bald due to feline complications of the freezing process.

"The Defenseless Dead
The Defenseless Dead

The Defenseless Dead is a novella in the Known Space universe by Larry Niven. It is the second of five Gil Hamilton detective stories....
," also by Larry Niven, explores the societal effects of using cryonically-frozen people as a source for organ transplants.

In the film Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back
Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back

Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back is a 1980 in film space opera film directed by Irvin Kershner. The screenplay, based on a story by George Lucas, was written by Lawrence Kasdan and Leigh Brackett....
, the character Han Solo
Han solo

Han solo, the sole member of genus Han, is a species of agnostid trilobite known only from fossils found in the Ordovician Zitai Formation of southern China....
 is captured and cryonically frozen in carbonite
Carbonite

Carbonite was one of the earliest and most successful coal-mining explosive material. It is made from such ingredients as nitroglycerin, wood meal, and some nitrate as that of sodium; also nitrobenzene, Potassium nitrate, sulfur, and diatomaceous earth....
. His later revival in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi

Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi is a 1983 in film space opera film directed by Richard Marquand and written by George Lucas and Lawrence Kasdan....
 leaves him disoriented and temporarily blind.

On television, producer David E. Kelley
David E. Kelley

David Edward Kelley is an Emmy Award-winning United Statesn screenwriter and television producer, best known as the creator of Picket Fences, Chicago Hope, The Practice, Ally McBeal, Boston Public and Boston Legal, as well as several successful films....
 wrote well-researched portrayals of cryonics for the TV shows L.A. Law
L.A. Law

L.A. Law is an United States television legal drama that ran from 1986 in television to 1994 in television. It was one of the most popular American television shows of the late 1980s and early 1990s....
 (1990 episode), Picket Fences
Picket Fences

Picket Fences is a 60-minute Dramatic programming centering around the residents of the fictional community of Rome, Wisconsin. The show initially ran from September 18, 1992 to June 26, 1996 on the CBS television network in the United States....
 (1994 episode), and Boston Legal
Boston Legal

Boston Legal is an American legal drama-comedy created by David E. Kelley, which originally ran on American Broadcasting Company from October 3, 2004 to December 8, 2008....
(2005 episode). In each case, there was a dying plaintiff petitioning a court for the right to elective cryopreservation
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
. Cryonics was also featured in an episode of Miami Vice
Miami Vice

Miami Vice is an United States of America television series produced by Michael Mann for NBC. The show became noted for its heavy integration and use of music and visual effects to tell a story....
 called "The Big Thaw", the episode "When We Dead Awaken" of seaQuest DSV
SeaQuest DSV

seaQuest DSV is an American science fiction television series created by Rockne S. O'Bannon. It originally aired on NBC between 1993 and 1996....
, the last two television works of Dennis Potter
Dennis Potter

Dennis Christopher George Potter was an England dramatist, best known for The Singing Detective. His widely acclaimed television dramas mixed fantasy and reality, the personal and the social....
, Karaoke and Cold Lazarus
Cold Lazarus

Cold Lazarus is a four-part British television drama written by Dennis Potter with the knowledge that he was dying of cancer of the pancreas....
, and the anime Cowboy Bebop
Cowboy Bebop

is a Japanese Anime Television program. Directed by Shinichiro Watanabe and written by Keiko Nobumoto, Cowboy Bebop was produced by Sunrise . Consisting of 26 episodes, the series follows the adventures of a group of bounty hunters, or "cowboys", traveling on their spaceship, the Bebop, in the year 2071....
.

The long-running British series TV Doctor Who
Doctor Who

Doctor Who is a British Science fiction on television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a mysterious alien Time travel known as "Doctor " who travels in his space and time-ship, the TARDIS, which normally appears from the exterior to be a blue 1950s police box....
 featured cryonics in its 1985 story Revelation of the Daleks
Revelation of the Daleks

Revelation of the Daleks is a list of Doctor Who serials in the United Kingdom science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in two weekly parts on March 23 and March 30 1985....
. The story imagined that laws and regulations would be made making it virtually impossible to get bodies back from storage for revival. The idea was that there would be little incentive for those that came later to revive the best and brightest from the past as they would then be in direct competition with them. Consequently, the bodies were used for darker purposes.

Cryonics was also satirized by the comedy cartoon series Futurama
Futurama

Futurama is an Animated cartoon United States Situation comedy created by Matt Groening, and developed by Groening and David X. Cohen for the Fox Broadcasting Company....
, whose premise surrounds Fry, a pizza delivery boy from the 20th century, who is cryogenically frozen on New Year's Eve, 1999, and wakes up one thousand years in the future, to find earth drastically changed.

In the Star Trek: The Original Series
Star Trek: The Original Series

Star Trek is a science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry that aired from September 8, 1966 to September 2, 1969. Though the original series was titled simply Star Trek, it has acquired the retronym Star Trek: The Original Series to distinguish it from the spinoffs that followed, and from the Star Trek fi...
 episode "Space Seed", a number of genetically enhanced humans from the 20th century, who were preserved cryonically in an unmanned space ship, are discovered and awakened by the Enterprise crew. A similar instance appears in the Star Trek: The Next Generation
Star Trek: The Next Generation

Star Trek: The Next Generation is a science fiction television program created by Gene Roddenberry as part of the Star Trek franchise. Set in the 24th century, about 70 years after Star Trek: The Original Series, the program features a new crew and a new Starship Enterprise....
 episode "The Neutral Zone". In that episode, three humans from the late 20th century, who were preserved cryonically in an unmanned space capsule after they perished, are discovered and awakened by the Enterprise crew.

Captain America
Captain America

Captain America is a Character that appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character First appearance in Captain America Comics #1 , from Marvel Comics' 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, and was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby....
 was placed unwillingly in a form of cryogenic suspension, according to Marvel Comics, when he was entombed in ice, preserving him, mind and body, for an indeterminable amount of years in the mainstream Marvel continuity (he was frozen in 1945 and unfrozen in the sixties, but thanks to the sliding timescale of the Marvel Universe, he's always been unfrozen about ten to fifteen years ago), and nearly sixty years in the Ultimate Marvel timeline, during which time each version was revived. His arch-nemesis the Red Skull
Red Skull

The Red Skull is a name shared by several Character , comic book supervillains from the Marvel Comics Marvel Comics Universe. All incarnations of the character are enemies of Captain America, other superheroes, and the United States in general....
 was the recipient of a similar treatment in the Heroes Reborn universe.

In the comic book Transmetropolitan
Transmetropolitan

Transmetropolitan is a postcyberpunk comic book series written by Warren Ellis with art by Darick Robertson and published by DC Comics. The series was originally part of the short-lived DC Comics imprint Helix Comics, but upon the end of the book's first year the series was moved to the Vertigo imprint as DC Comics cancelled the Helix C...
, people whose heads were preserved in cryogenic stasis are routinely revived by a government program and given a cloned body. These people, known as Revivals, are overwhelmed by the dystopian future in which they have awoken and distraught by the death of every person they have ever known, and they often break down; they are generally ignored by society and are left to fend for themselves.

The most famous cryopreserved patient is baseball player Ted Williams
Ted Williams

Theodore Samuel "Ted" Williams also nicknamed The Kid, the Splendid Splinter, Teddy Ballgame and The Thumper, was an United States left fielder in Major League Baseball....
. The popular urban legend
Urban legend

An urban legend, urban myth, or urban tale is a form of modern folklore consisting of stories thought to be factual by those circulating them....
 that Walt Disney
Walt Disney

Walter Elias Disney was a multiple Academy Award-winning American film producer, film director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur and philanthropist....
 was cryopreserved is false; he was cremated, and interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery. Robert A. Heinlein
Robert A. Heinlein

Robert Anson Heinlein was an United States novelist and science fiction writer. Often called "the dean of science fiction writers", he is one of the most popular, influential, and controversial authors of the genre....
, who wrote enthusiastically
The Door into Summer

The Door into Summer is a science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein, originally serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and 1957 in literature....
 of the concept, was cremated and had his ashes distributed over the Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean

The Pacific Ocean is the largest of the Earth's oceanic divisions. Its name is derived from the Latin name Mare Pacificum, "peaceful sea", bestowed upon it by the Portugal explorer Ferdinand Magellan....
. Timothy Leary
Timothy Leary

Timothy Francis Leary was an American writer, psychologist, futurist, and advocate of psychedelic drug research and one of the first people whose remains have been sent into space....
 was a long-time cryonics advocate, and signed up with a major cryonics provider. He changed his mind, however, shortly before his death, and so was not cryopreserved.

Cryonics was the inspiration for the song "Cryogenic" by the electronic rock group TheSwimmingPools.

In the South Park
South Park

South Park is an United Statesn animation situation comedy, notorious for its toilet humour, surrealism, and often black comedy, which satirizes Subject matter in South Park including religion, politics, violence, abuse, sexuality, and mental disorder....
 two part episode entitled, "Go God Go
Go God Go

"Go God Go" is episode 1012 of Comedy Central's South Park. It was broadcast on November 1, 2006, and is part one of a two-part story arc. Part two is "Go God Go XII"....
" the character Eric Cartman
Eric Cartman

Eric Theodore Cartman , is one of the four main List of South Park characterss on the animation television series South Park, along with fellow protagonists Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, and Kenny McCormick, though he is often portrayed as the series' main antagonist in opposition of his friends....
 is desperately awaiting the launch of the Wii
Wii

The Wii is a home video game console released by Nintendo. As a History of video game consoles console, the Wii primarily competes with Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3....
. To pass the time quicker, Cartman has himself frozen into a mountain side to be reawakened at the launch of the Wii. An avalanche covers his body and he is never found by his friends or family. He sits in suspended animation for more than 500 years until he is unfrozen by the Unified Atheist League, one of three groups of atheists that then control the world.

The subculture of cryonicists

Cryonicists have been able to form cryonics societies in highly populated areas (see history section
Cryonics

Cryonics is the low-temperature Preserve of humans and animals that can no longer be sustained by contemporary medicine until resuscitation may be possible in the future....
), have regular meetings, publish magazines and hold conferences. Saul Kent
Saul Kent

Saul Kent is a prominent life extension activist, and co-founder of the Life Extension Foundation, a major dietary supplement vendor and promoter of anti-aging research....
, Evan Cooper, Jerry White, Dr. M. Coleman Harris, as well as Fred and Linda Chamberlain
Fred and Linda Chamberlain

Frederick Rockwell Chamberlain III and his wife Linda are the wiktionary:Founders of the cryonics organization Alcor Life Extension Foundation. Their long and continued history of activism in cryonics make them among the most well-known cryonics pioneers....
 were active in organizing cryonics conferences in the early years of cryonics. The magazines of the cryonics organizations have also helped keep members of the cryonics community informed about events and common problems. On July 24, 1988, a Ph.D.
Doctor of Philosophy

Doctor of Philosophy, abbreviated Ph.D. or PhD for the Latin , meaning "teacher of philosophy", is an postgraduate academic degree awarded by University....
 in computer science
Computer science

Computer science is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation, and of practical techniques for their implementation and application in computer systems....
 named Kevin Brown started an electronic mailing list
Electronic mailing list

An electronic mailing list is a special usage of electronic mail that allows for widespread distribution of information to many Internet users....
 called CryoNet that became a powerful tool of communication for the cryonics community. Numerous other mailing lists and web forums for discussing cryonics and the affairs of particular organizations have since appeared, but CryoNet remains a central point of contact for cryonicists.

Cryonicists have also had a common jargon, including their use of the words patient, deanimation and suspension. The phrase cryonic suspension to describe cryopreservation is falling into disfavor, partly because the abbreviation suspension is too easily misunderstood. As in other subcultures, some members of the community can have strong feelings about the use of "politically correct
Political correctness

Political correctness is a term applied to language, ideas, policies, or behavior seen as seeking to minimize offense to gender, racial, cultural, disabled, aged or other identity groups....
" cryonics language.

See also

  • Alcor Life Extension Foundation
    Alcor Life Extension Foundation

    The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a Scottsdale, Arizona, Arizona, United States-based nonprofit company that researches, advocates for and performs cryonics, the preservation of humans after legal death in liquid nitrogen, with hopes of restoring them to full health when new technology is developed in the future....
  • American Cryonics Society
    American Cryonics Society

    The American Cryonics Society is a member-run, California-based, 501 Tax exemption non-profit corporation that supports and promotes research and education into cryonics and cryobiology....
  • Cryonics Institute
    Cryonics Institute

    The Cryonics Institute is a member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation which provides cryonics services. CI is located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan, Michigan....
  • Cryonics Society
    Cryonics Society

    The Cryonics Society is a registered 5013 non-profit organization and is the only registered nonprofit organization in the world dedicated solely to educating and informing the public about the emerging medical technology known as cryonics....
  • Cryptobiosis
    Cryptobiosis

    Cryptobiosis is an ametabolic state of life entered by an organism in response to adverse environmental conditions such as desiccation, freezing, and oxygen deficiency....
  • Hibernation
    Hibernation

    Hibernation is a state of inactivity and Metabolism depression in animals, characterized by lower body temperature, slower breathing, and lower metabolic rate....
  • Immortality Institute
    Immortality Institute

    The Immortality Institute is a Non-profit organization501 organization with the mission "to conquer the blight of involuntary death." The organization hosts an online forum, publishes books , creates films, and sponsors conferences in order to advance life extension research....
  • Immortalist Society
    Immortalist Society

    The Immortalist Society is a Charitable organization 501 organization devoted to research and education in the areas of cryonics and life extension....
  • Indefinite lifespan
    Indefinite lifespan

    Indefinite lifespan is a term used in the life extension movement to refer to the longevity of humans, and other lifeforms, under conditions in which aging can be effectively and completely prevented and treated....
  • Information theoretical death
    Information theoretical death

    Information-theoretic death is the destruction of the human brain and the information within it to such an extent that recovery of the original person is theoretically impossible by any physical means....
  • KrioRus
    KrioRus

    KrioRus is the first Russian cryonics company. Established in 2005 by Danila Medvedev, it is the first cryonics company outside the United States....
  • Life extension
    Life extension

    Life extension refers to an increase in maximum lifespan or Life expectancy, especially in humans, by slowing down or reversing the senescence. Average lifespan is heavily influenced by infant mortality and child mortality, which are frequently linked to infectious diseases or nutrition problems....
  • Nanomedicine
    Nanomedicine

    Nanomedicine is the medicine application of nanotechnology. The approaches to nanomedicine range from the medical use of nanomaterials, to Nanoelectronics biosensors, and even possible future applications of molecular nanotechnology....
  • Neuropreservation
    Neuropreservation

    Neuropreservation is cryopreservation of the human brain with the intention of future resuscitation and regrowth of a healthy body around the brain....
  • Rejuvenation (aging)
    Rejuvenation (aging)

    Rejuvenation is the hypothetical reversal of the Senescence.Rejuvenation is distinct from life extension. Life extension strategies often study the causes of aging and try to oppose those causes in order to slow aging....
  • Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence (SENS)
  • Super cooling
  • Suspended animation
    Suspended animation

    Suspended animation is the slowing of life processes by external means without termination. Breathing, heartbeat, and other involuntary functions may still occur, but they can only be detected by artificial means....
  • Vitrification
    Vitrification

    Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....


External links

  • , This American Life
    This American Life

    This American Life is a weekly hour-long radio program produced by Chicago Public Radio and hosted by Ira Glass. It is distributed by Public Radio International on PRI affiliate stations and is also available as a free weekly podcast....
    , 18 April 2008. The story of Robert ("Bob") Nelson, the Cryonics Society of California, and the Chatsworth case.