| > We don't need the specific organization to survive thousands of years in its original form, we just need cryonics patients to be passed ahead peacefully to another organization in the event of failure. And how do you believe you'll accomplish this? The second, third, etc. companies are not going to sign up for this responsibility for free. Nor is there any guarantee that they won't also fail, or be merged into one conglomerate that fails. > We haven't yet had a chance to experiment with things under conditions of universal literacy, the absence of much armed conflict, and other amenities of the modern world. Certain things (fashions, cultural memes) seem to get replaced quickly under such conditions, but that doesn't seem likely to extend to something like a trust fund. I don't understand how this is at all relevant. I see no compelling reason to believe that the US will not experience natural disasters, wars, failed companies, or any number of other incidents that could cause cryo-failure. The fact that the population is fairly educated is almost completely irrelevant. > Cryonicists certainly have more motive than the average person to promote stability, literacy, and nonviolence. Frozen people are not in a position to promote anything. And the people keeping them frozen don't have an incentive to do anything except collect paychecks. |
Yes it costs more money and it has to be done in advance.
> Nor is there any guarantee that they won't also fail, or be merged into one conglomerate that fails.
You could put it in the bylaws that they cannot merge into a conglomerate, or mandate that they split every so often.
> I don't understand how this is at all relevant. I see no compelling reason to believe that the US will not experience natural disasters, wars, failed companies, or any number of other incidents that could cause cryo-failure.
Sure those are a constant risk. The solution is to put money and resources towards reducing the risks, starting with the worst ones and/or the cheapest to fix. This likely has enormous positive externalities for the population as a whole.
> The fact that the population is fairly educated is almost completely irrelevant.
Are you sure? Education is an important element of what sustains civilization.
> Frozen people are not in a position to promote anything.
They are now when they aren't frozen yet.
> And the people keeping them frozen don't have an incentive to do anything except collect paychecks.
They do if they a) expect to be frozen themselves, b) see the patients as fellow humans, or c) see the patients as priceless historical artifacts. But yes they are also motivated by whatever keeps getting them their paychecks -- obviously it is best to stack things so that the paychecks are dependent on things that are desirable for the patients.