| I know it may be a little nitpicking, but viruses are not technically alive. Also, the fact that this multicellular organism can withstand long term freezing bears nothing about whether people can do that. I can think of two easy arguments: 1. If you think about this single organism, imagine there must have probably been a huge number of them frozen and maybe 1 in a million or billion survived (we don't really know from the article). Now, for a simple organism it might be fine, it is enough for one in billion to live and start spreading, but the same cannot be said about human. You need every single cell in our organism very, very high chance of surviving to even talk about entire human to be able to survive. 2. Another problem might be central nervous system. It does not seem currently possible to bring back a person that has completely "flattened out" when it comes to their brain. A person with no brain activity is legally dead and no single case of bringing back to life from that point has ever been registered. It is not known whether brain can be brought back at all once all signals stop. I know this is pure conjecture, but I suspect it is possible that brain is a case of a system without a startup procedure. It only works as long as the process is continuing but if it stops there might be a bunch of catch-22 type situations which basically make it impossible to startup the brain. Your PC is built with startup procedure in mind. Now think what if you have removed everything that is needed for your PC to start. You could have perfectly functional PC as long as it is in operation, but once you shut down no way to bring it back, no software, hardware, procedure, API or anything to start the operation again. |
this is not a settled argument...
https://askabiologist.asu.edu/questions/are-viruses-alive