Author Topic: If google came out with immortality what would you do?  (Read 2807 times)

Just die with some sense of nobility.

To live forever is to defy every single religion that has been put in place since the dawn of intelligent thought.

I want to do such.

apple would be the first to do this tbh
Gotta buy the new iPhone every year or else they hit the kill switch.

You're too late if you're taking a gamble while at death's door. Just die with some sense of nobility.
eh i figure that there's no much to lose considering you'd be dead

apple would be the first to do this tbh. Google and Microsoft will just improve it
But Google's actually done stuff related to this already.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/2048964/google-launches-moonshot-immortality-project.html

Link is a bit misleading giving the actual contents, but I'm pretty sure Google would the be the first tech giant to tgo after something along these lines.

apple would be the first to do this tbh
yeah, but they'd bring out a regular, gold, and platinum version too, and charge much more for the gold/plat plating

To live forever is to defy every single religion that has been put in place since the dawn of intelligent thought.

I want to do such.
Except you're not living forever. Revived or not you will spend time literally dead.
There have been thousands of people who have died and returned to life.

Freezing your body is no more desperate than the egyptians trying to preserve your body, organs, treasures and even burying alive your servants and pets in your tomb.

This freezing company also has a chemical solution that preserves nerves, cells, etc so the deep freeze will not rupture any blood vessels or whatever.

Freezing your body is no more desperate than the egyptians trying to preserve your body, organs, treasures and even burying alive your servants and pets in your tomb.

This freezing company also has a chemical solution that preserves nerves, cells, etc so the deep freeze will not rupture any blood vessels or whatever.
who are you talking to

Freezing your body is no more desperate than the egyptians trying to preserve your body, organs, treasures and even burying alive your servants and pets in your tomb.
Except they weren't trying to live forever. They were trying to move on to the afterlife.
They were desperate to bring their posessions with them into death, not to avoid death altogether.

This freezing company also has a chemical solution that preserves nerves, cells, etc so the deep freeze will not rupture any blood vessels or whatever.
They've never revived anyone. If they were certain it worked they would have frozen a healthy person and revived him years later.

Except you're not living forever. Revived or not you will spend time literally dead.

If I can get frozen for 1000+ years the time of my death to the time I get revived it would seem like a minute passed by.

No big deal to me. My consciousness is not going to be mentally aware. It will cease to exist until my revival. Which means consciousness only exist if the specific brain is alive which means reincarnation and the afterlife is false.

They've never revived anyone. If they were certain it worked they would have frozen a healthy person and revived him years later.

I never said they did. They said in the future it may be possible to revive them. They are not freezing perfectly living people here, they are only freezing people after they die.

So they could freeze me for like 1,000 years until there is technology available to bring me back to life even after being registered as legally dead.



I would rather freeze myself than to rot in the ground or get burned to ash.

If being frozen is an act of desperation then it's no more desperate than believing you'll get into heaven with god.


I'll pick the scientific solution over the hypothetical faith solution.

the ride never ends with our friend tony here

the ride never ends with our friend tony here
thats what immortality is for


If I had the chance, I'd definetely get myself put in a freezer. My scientific curiousity alone would drive me to attempt to find out where technology leads.