wedrifid comments on Normal Cryonics - Less Wrong

58 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 19 January 2010 07:08PM

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Comment author: wedrifid 21 January 2010 02:16:34AM *  3 points [-]

Your comment is not internally consistent. You present a model which predicts that people will not sign up for cryonics even if they think it is not a scam.

Comment author: byrnema 21 January 2010 02:23:59AM -1 points [-]

It's a generally true thing, not a worked out linear argument.

I contend that parents don't have access to cryonics. The rest is just random bullets of indignation.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 21 January 2010 06:49:42PM 3 points [-]

It's a generally true thing, not a worked out linear argument.

Which just goes to say, you see what I'm saying? There you go.

Comment author: wedrifid 21 January 2010 02:25:50AM 2 points [-]

The rest is just random bullets of indignation.

Yes, and the fact that they contradict one another is significant to me.

Comment author: byrnema 21 January 2010 02:36:42AM *  1 point [-]

Well the first contradiction was that I was giving ad advice to a company I accused of being elitist. The contradiction was not lost upon me; but if I have a probability that they're doing X, I can hedge by also betting on Y. Anyway, a cryonics company isn't a monolith; I'm sure they've got their different internal perspectives. Which leads to my second set of contradictions about people -- but people aren't a monolith either.

Young husbands will go along with cryonics because they like Terminator, and 40-something mothers will go along with cryonics because there isn't a cure for that chromosomal anomaly now but there might be in 5 years. Or maybe it will buy someone extra time to have another baby to provide cord blood. The problem is trying to sell them a vision of a weird far distant future instead of just providing a service.