According to doctors, how feasible is preserving the dying for future revival?

2 pointsposted 11 hours ago
by arielzj

2 Comments

palata

10 hours ago

> For now, we’re stuck doing what we do for any consequential question where we can’t just wait and see (as with climate change projections or assessing the trajectory of AI development): we gather the best available evidence, and we ask the people most qualified to interpret it.

I think it's important to realise that because someone has knowledge in the field does not mean they can make prediction about completely unknown things.

There is a huge difference between "we don't see a reason why telekinesis would be impossible, but we have no clue how it would work" and "we have measurements and models of climate change that lead us to believe that if we don't change anything, our society will collapse".

How feasible is it to revive someone? We don't know. We haven't proven that it is impossible; just like telekinesis.

JoeAltmaier

11 hours ago

Curious, asking the people who admittedly couldn't save them in the first place.

Ask a biologist, or theorist, or someone following trends in technology. But a doctor? Not gonna have any better idea about that, than they do about what constitutes a minimum daily dose for a vitamin. Originally those things were set by polling doctors, and they were essentially set at random.