The complaint is not with the trend, it is with using "future technology" as an answer to specific problems we do not know how to solve. Its not an answer at all, its like saying "we will solve it by solving it...later".
What puzzles me is why people assume the specific question (how) needs to be answered as opposed to the general question (whether).
Because people want to know if the "how" is even possible. But the fact the "how" will depend on technology that hasn't been invented yet arouses a great deal of skepticism.
Luke Parrish points me to what is clearly by far the most serious critique of cryonics ever written: a 57-page treatment by Evelina Martinenaite and Juliette Tavenier, presented as a 3rd semester project at Roskilde University in Denmark supervised by Ole Andersen.
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