A unattended cremation that I will pre-pay. Cheapest coffin available. No flowers. No death notice. I don't care what I am wearing in the coffin.
We buried my Gram in jeans and a sweatshirt. It was what she always wore, in fact I don't think by that point she even owned anything dressier. Maybe the slacks and sweater she wore to my sister's wedding. Anyway, we're pretty sure she would have been happy with our decision. It comforted us (particularly my mom).
Me, I plan on being cremated. They can toss me in there naked, or do the Viking funeral pyre thing, whatever. My husband wants to be frozen, so we've got both extremes covered.
Does your husband want Full Body Frozen or just Head Frozen?
A unattended cremation that I will pre-pay. Cheapest coffin available. No flowers. No death notice. I don't care what I am wearing in the coffin.
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why would you need a coffin or clothing at all if you're getting cremated?
You haven't been cremated before? Dude, that's so unhip.
16. Requirements for enclose of body remains and body parts
A person must not bring bodily remains or body parts to be cremated into a public cemetery, or convey those remains or body parts within a public cemetery, unless those remains or body parts are enclosed in a coffin, container or receptacle –
(a) with a flat base: and
(b) that is clean and hygienic; and
(c) that is constructed of wood, or other substantial material that is combustible and that will not –
(i) impede the cremation process; or
(ii) cause damage to the cremator; and
(d) that will not give rise to noxious emissions when burnt; and
(e) from which neither offensive or noxious emissions nor matter from the bodily remains or body parts will escape.
At least you weren't dehydrated and powered. Tang just doesn't go with Solyent Green.
We buried my Gram in jeans and a sweatshirt. It was what she always wore, in fact I don't think by that point she even owned anything dressier. Maybe the slacks and sweater she wore to my sister's wedding. Anyway, we're pretty sure she would have been happy with our decision. It comforted us (particularly my mom).
Me, I plan on being cremated. They can toss me in there naked, or do the Viking funeral pyre thing, whatever. My husband wants to be frozen, so we've got both extremes covered.
Does your husband want Full Body Frozen or just Head Frozen?
Full Body. He thinks in the far future they will cure whatever he dies of. And that they will want to unfreeze and cure him.
He has also thought about transferring his brain into an android body so he can live forever. We obviously consume far too much sci-fi, but his optimism is charming.
Does your husband want Full Body Frozen or just Head Frozen?
Full Body. He thinks in the far future they will cure whatever he dies of. And that they will want to unfreeze and cure him.
He has also thought about transferring his brain into an android body so he can live forever. We obviously consume far too much sci-fi, but his optimism is charming.
Well, they won't only have to cure whatever he dies from but also be able to correct, and reverse, the damage freezing something does to cells.
Frozen head bowling is going to be huge in the future.
To answer seriously, if you could revive someone and provide them with a new body or repair their old one, their input on what life was like during their time would be an invaluable research tool. They could give a larger context to the disparate bits of surviving media and technology future historians would find.
We could *probably* argue that any contract for those who under goes cryogenics includes them being revived should the ability to do so ever come. Though I don't know how that contract would be enforced aside from having some *really* dedicated family/lawyers staying active for years, decades or centuries after you've died. We could also probably argue that, like what happened in TNG, that future "morals" would honor-bound future doctors to take the steps to revive the deceased.
But, really, as it stands right now with cryogenics we only know how to solve half the problem. Namely freezing you and keeping you consistently frozen for an extended period of time. And even if we do reach a point to fix or cure whatever it is that killed you that doesn't help us or, mostly, "you." Because freezing stuff does major, major damage to cells in even the best of circumstances (freezing things quickly and keeping them at a constant, very low, temperature.) Right now we're just hoping at some point someone will figure out how to fix this damage.
I think there's *better* "results" in freezing just the brain of someone as the less mass you're freezing the quicker it freezes which makes smaller crystals and minimizes the damage. But NOW you're waiting for someone to figure out how to do brain transplants rather than just solve whatever killed you. And if what killed you was a brain-related problem, Well, ugh.
Maybe there's a reason why only a literal handful of people have taken this route. Well that and that it's very expensive process to undertake.
As for unfreezing someone being a benefit to people of the future to better understand the subject's way of life? Well, first of all that's assuming anyone in the future is going to care about or want to know about the average 20th/21st century person's way of life.That and, well, most of it is going to be pretty well documented barring any kind of major disaster that erases all of records and documentation of current events. There is the possibility of the "digital black hole" problem many speak of but even with that there's plenty of ways to avoid that problem since we know that it is one.
Well, there used to be! http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Eternal_ImageWhat a shame STAR TREK hasn't come out with TREK COFFINS in the shape of a torpedo!
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