AngryParsley comments on Normal Cryonics - Less Wrong
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You asked before and I replied:
And what are their premiums? They simply have to be far higher than form 25 year old's 20 year term life insurance if their business is to make any profits. The only low premiums I've seen so far are for young people's term life insurance, which people keep naively extrapolating ignoring aging.
I'm really disappointed that this supposedly rational community keeps failing basic math. The entire "cryonics is cheap" argument relies on failing basic math.
Again, I replied in the very same thread I linked to.
Term life insurance is not a bad idea for most people. Lots of people save up money over their careers. $80,000 is barely a down payment on a condo in the bay area.
I should note that most of the organizations we are talking about (Alcor, ACS, CI) are non-profits.
$80,000 plus $500 a year in membership dues is cheap. (Alcor). I can multiply, divide and find various integrals and derivatives of those figures if it makes you happy. Perhaps it is my English skills that are my flaw? You dispute my understanding of 'cheap'?
80k is for neuro-preservation, full body is 150k. Neither of them counts as "cheap" by any definition of "cheap". It's also at least an order of magnitude more expensive than what Eliezer keeps talking about ($300/year).
CI is $50K for whole-body.
I thought their current website said $30K, if you don't contract for standby services?
That's not including the cost of transportation to CI.
Oh.
This reference says it's much more if you include all costs:
28,000 means enough vitrification solution for neuro
The $300/year is supposed to be the insurance rate for a $100k policy, but I agree - that is not cheap. I am likely to make enough money to afford it if I stay on my current career plan (mechanical engineering), but it's not a negligible sum.
Dollars per expected day of life extension. Applying the same definition to other health investments makes cryonics the 'cheap' option. I agree that this is probably not the definition used by some advocates.
Yes. (Well, if you use binary or base 4.)
Downvoted for going against taw's Outside the influence of evidence View?