ciphergoth comments on Normal Cryonics - Less Wrong
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Most cryonics literature concentrates on the possibility of direct bodily reanimation, not scanning and WBE.
And yet even vitrified brains still fracture during freezing, and even pre-vitrification bodies are stored. What happens in modern practice to bodies that were impossible to vitrify, or that weren't frozen for "too long" (e.g. because of autopsy)? Are they thrown away? (I believe they are.) I'm a little worried about these scenarios (and consistency of decision-making that goes into them).
Lots of non-vitrified bodies are stored. I don't think any are discarded because they were impossible to vitrify, but some are discarded because they weren't frozen for too long, and Alcor note that this is controversial: see Neural Archaeology and Ethics of Non-ideal Cryonics Cases.
I'm expecting to have to wait a long subjective time before I get to meet James Bedford, put it that way!
(Updated to add "Ethics..." link)
Thanks for the links! From the first one:
From the second link:
Sure, but if I was Alcor or CI, I'd be wary of being seen to be over-eager to preserve (and so get the money).
The best solution is probably to ask when you sign up.