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Today, with just fewer than200 patients preserved within the two major cryonics facilities, the Michigan-based Cryonics Institute and the Arizona-based Alcor, and with 10 times as many signed up ...
The cryonics debate explained, plus new issues in waking the dead. Would cryonics customers even be welcomed in the future?
Cryonics, Brain Preservation and the Weird Science of Cheating Death It's the stuff of science fiction: chilling your body inside a stainless steel chamber for years on end. But is cryonics a way ...
Cryonics: Chilling into the future Nestled in the picturesque landscape of the Arizona desert is a very non-picturesque office park, in Scottsdale, where the Alcor Corporation says they may have ...
The cryonics society's Yount said it is possible White will end up at the Cryonics Institute in Michigan or could go to a new Southern California facility expected to be set up by a former Alcor ...
The business of cryopreservation — storing bodies at deep freeze until well into the future — got a whole lot more complicated during the pandemic.
Cryonics involves preserving human bodies at ultra-low temperatures in the anticipation that future science will one day revive them. Proponents and skeptics weigh in.
Enter cryonics, in which entire people are frozen immediately after death with the idea of defrosting them later when a cure for whatever ailed them has been found.
Human cryogenics, often referred to as cryonics, is the process of preserving the human body at ultra-low temperatures after legal death, with the hope of future revival. The concept is based on ...
A German cryonics start-up is offering a chance at a second life for the cost of a sports car. Is cryogenics within reach, or still an empty promise?
How a Controversial Cryonics Procedure Could Finally Make Immortality Possible Futurists, including some medical doctors, are signing up to be decapitated—and then have their brains frozen.