The Open Thread posted at the beginning of the month has gotten really, really big, so I've gone ahead and made another one. Post your new discussions here!
This thread is for the discussion of Less Wrong topics that have not appeared in recent posts. If a discussion gets unwieldy, celebrate by turning it into a top-level post.
First, I estimate it will be orders of magnitude harder to fix that damage than to fix the cause of death. Fixing cancer or many other diseases would likely be a matter of intervening with drugs or genes. Fixing damage from freezing or vitrifying is usually held to require advanced nanotechnology.
Second, I think that there will be continued motivation for work to progress on all those things (cancer, heart attacks, etc.), and so the technology for fixing them will continue to improve. But the technology for fixing the damage is not likely to continue to improve, because (warm) people won't have a need for it.
Good. I agree with you that fixing vitrifying damage could require advanced nanotechnology and that fixing causes of the death might not.
However, I'd like to linger a moment longer on the latter. Suppose someone has died of cancer and been vitrified in a 'good' way that is easy to undo. Presumably, gene therapy and drugs would work to cure their cancer if they were well. However, they've died. What was the cause of death? To what extent is it likely that cells been damaged? Can we anticipate what might be required to make them feel well again?
Also, you didn't comment on whether you thought a delay was more likely than no revival at all for persons inconveniently vitrified.