While it may be far off for an entire person, this opens the door for a great way to preserve donated organs! Instead of rushing to get permission from grieving relatives due to the viability of their deceased loved one's organs, you could just ask for their organs to get vitrified through an injection or something, to be donated at a later date if at all. Organs could even be harvested and stored for later!
Don't worry, TED-Ed is wrong. There are non-destructive techniques developed recently. 2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation (ytube also)
@C @C The future is always in the future. This is a fraud of the highest order. It is like I owe you money, and will pay you sometime in the future, anytime
The field of humancryopreservation is lagging behind ... I work in plant cryopreservation and we are able to cryopreserve 1mm³ sized shoot meristem AND plant these plantlets in the field afterwards. Cryopreservation of plant tissue is an important part of gene banking and storing diversity.
@@justanotherloki5569 it all depends a bit, when developing protocols we store them for at least 30 min, as the material should not change anymore once cooled. I helped develop such a protocol for sweet potato shoots and there we saw some differences between some of our varieties we had 2 where more than 90 % of the material we cryopreserved was able to regenerate into a normal plant and 1 where only 10 % did that. Luckily most of the ones we store have a regeneration rate of more than 50%. These % are species and cultivar dependent. But because we work with clonal material and back ups if some of them die it's not a problem. Other people from my lab are also validating long term storage where they regenerate banana plantlets that have been stored for multiple years. Meanwhile we store hundreds banana accessions which had successfull trials.
However in human cryopreservation, the ethical problem is one of the major factors that makes it lag out compared to plants. Also plant cellular structure allows an easier temperature manipulation.
I'm surprised that the freezing of human embryos was never brought up in this video. In a way, we can already freeze humans and bring them back to life. The challenge is figuring out how to do it with a fully grown human.
@@kompatybilijny9348 Time is continuous, but not our cells as most are replaced 10 years later yet we still believe that's us (Ship of Theseus). We're constantly changing on a cellular level imperceptibly so therefore our sense of identity is illusory.
@@dangerfly Except that the correct solution to the ship of theseus is that an object/creature remains the same creature regardless of how many parts of it you replace, as long as that object/creature has continuously existed during that process. Even If I replaced a part of my brain with a perfect simulation of that part of my brain, I would remain the same person. Then I could move on and continue to replace more parts of my brain with simmilar simulations until I was a fully synthetic being, I would remian the same person. And if someone managed to rebuild the old organic brain from original parts, the person created in that process did not exist before his/her creation and therefore is a copy, despite being made out of original parts.
TED was lazy on this one, we can preserve cells without ice formation or damage. 2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
They got this working very reliably in the 60s using only microwave ovens and conventional refrigeration. It only worked on small mammals though. Tom Scott did a video on it.
I like the method where they take all your blood out replace it with a cold blue fluid and then perform brain surgury that can only be done with no blood flow, then they take out the blue fluid, pump your blood back in, warm you up and your good as new. I think its one of the coolest things out there. Not literally cool though, it cools the body to like 20 degrees, cold for body temperature but pretty nice for room temperature.
Some thoughts and questions: • Will a person preserved and revived through cryobiology methods have the same qualities, skills, and abilities before his natural death? If physical damage has been done to the body and the mind, by what percentage will they reduce? • If the concept of the 'Atman' is true, what happens to it when the person is in preservation? • Legal consequences: Interim death certificates have to be issued to those who opt for cryogenic preservation which will be scrapped when they're revived. The hospital or the laboratory will contact the family and some government officials to decide if the person should be revived and who will look after him (accommodation, food, etc.); the government may take responsibility for those who don't have family and can contribute to the country's progress. This will help avoid both civil and criminal issues. • Social consequences: Whether or not the person can reproduce after being revived? If yes, will they have normal babies or be physically disabled? • Economic consequences: More competition for jobs.
The last question doesnt make sense. More people wont neccessarily equate to more competition. A greater worker force however is needed to keep up any govnerment. Also, for your first question, no idea. As mentioned in the video, cryobiology cant exactly revive you. But lets say it did, then the amount of damage or changes done to the brain be the biggest factor in what you need to relearn, and it depends entirely on where the damage is, which no one would know.
@@slampestlol, the last point is leveraged against litteraly any new technology "this new wondrous technology has a possiblity to decrease employment for a short time, let's shut it down lads. And while we are at it let's throw out the steam engine, electricity, printing press, automobiles, etc. And go back to serfdom where there was 100% employment 100% of the time"
Are you aware that you have to be legally dead before they can freeze you? It would be unethical to freeze a living person, so they have to have a doctor pronounce them dead, then freeze them as quick as possible. Then, hypothetically, hundreds of years in the future when we invent magic movie defibrillators that bring people back to life, *_and_* we develop a cure for whatever disease they died from, _then_ they can be brought back.
Cyberpunk 2077 did a good job explaining why this sucks or SOMA if you are into the less known video games. SOMA is a nightmare of the issues of this. You are not your body, you are not even your brain. The closest thing to actually being you is an electrical loop in your brain. Not THE brain, a loop inside of it. This is important, because when that loop ends by any of many different things, you stop being "You". This has been observed in countless studies, someone was dead a little too long before being resuscitated, part of their brain was removed or damaged, a disease caused atrophy or inflammation in key areas, or even just you aged and certain electrical pathways in your brain opened up or deprecated. Trying to copy that electrical loop, which was created by gradual changes over time to match the circuits created in the brain specifically to accommodate that loop, into a construct, which by design has to have a uniform system of operation is almost bordering on the levels of magical rather than scientific. We're basically talking here that in order for that to be possible, they need to not only have a way to capture the original loop without distorting it, but also create a 1:1 perfect replica of the existing circuit into the circuitry of the machine for every person they do this with. I didn't even go into the higher level stuff how you're not just 1 electrical loop, you're 2 loops that connect to a single completely separate loop while still being their own loops. So they basically need to copy all 3 of your loops AND keep them separated but specifically two of them are able to communicate to the 3rd one or again you become a different person.
well idk we are far away from any computer having the amount of connections a human brains does so right now even if we could get the data we couldnt run your consciousness on anything. Creating these kind of algorithims will be tough as well
If they could preserve the brain, without damaging it, that will be good enough. In theory, a new body could be created (a biologic or mechanical one) to serve as vessel for the brain. Personally, I would go with that option, since it only requires the preservation of a single organ.
@@purple.requiem It will need nourishment ALOT of nourishment. If the brain gets a robotic vessel it can control the brain will still be a biological organ and need food energy to survive.
@@VeryRGOTI at that state the all of the brain activities are halted. So it doesn't need any energy to operate as it's not even operating in the first place
What ted ed is missing is that it doesn't have to be revived. The brain just has to be analysed to be reconstructed. To say that it's proven is right but to say that it can't be done is baseless, it's like claiming an ASI can't exist because it doesn't exist today.
What about harnessing and building on the limitations of natural hibernation to achieve something similar to the stasis sleep of sci-fi movies. It could be useful for things like trips to Mars, where one or two of the crew are awake in 6 month shifts, putting down the previous shift, fine tuning instruments, ensuring the snoozing crew's muscles do not atrophy, other astronaut chores, waking up the next shift. The crew do not age the full 5 years the trip would take thanks to the extremely slowed metabolic rate caused by hibernation. Though before that we'd need to crack the nascent potential of the axolotl in paralell to hibernation to avoid any complications with the human hibernation process if it has any chance of working.
lol in space travel how much time they experience is entirely up to the tech they have driving the ship. Time is relative and the less gravity you experience, the more time passes for you. This is a bad thing, it means you're aging much faster regardless of hibernation stuff. Having literally 0 gravity is the worst situation. If the ship travels at light speed then it's technically worse as this got explained in the book "The Forever War" where just traveling from one planet to another planet fucks up the time for all 3 places to such an extreme that by the time you reach the other planet they have forgotten about you and are probably so much more advanced they will annihilate you effortlessly. In a nutshell, if they have ships like we use now... They will age drastically faster. If they have a ship traveling at light speed... They will drastically slow aging while both planets undergo many, many years of aging. If they travel faster than light... They will go backwards in time. Where they somehow arrive at the destination before they left the previous location. Probably should hope those are only one way trips.
@@setcheck67 Lightspeed? What has that got to do with induced hibernation... You completely missed the point of my comment, and I have no idea where to begin in trying to understand the relevance of your rabbit hole tangent. If you haven't misunderstood the author of this "forever war" you referred to, as you have my comment, the book's author should've conducted further research to prevent misconceptions like yours. Misinformation can be harmful.
I just watched Vsause's Mind Field video called "should I die" and Kurzgesagt's video on how life is made of dead things, and then this shows up in my feed...
I think it parallels Egyptian mummies to preserve bodies for another life. True, now our methods are 'scientific', and with more equipments, but the motive is similar. Fear of death is a real thing for humanity. Huh history repeats itself. For me, I'd rather RIP when I die than hang on futilely to life.
There's this show I watch called Manifest. It's about a plane that came back 5 1/2 after it took off. In one episode, you learn that some of the passengers had no one waiting for them when they came back which meant they had no where to go after the plane ride. When you think about it, would cryogenically freezing yourself be worth it if there's no one to greet you when you come out? In fact, there a couple of episodes of Batman TAS which addressed the idea of cryogenically freezing someone with a terminal illness until a cure was found. Our technology might be more advanced now than it was back when the show first came on but we're still no closer to finding a cure for cancer than we are to inventing flying cars.
Technology is growing in a faster and faster rate every year. I’m pretty young right now, so I guarantee we’ll think of something by the time i die. assuming I don’t die young in some horrific accident or something
funny you mention flying cars. we don't have flying cars today because they are loud, take up ridiculous amount of space at both the air and ground infrastructure, and the least unsustainable mode of transport - just like regular cars. The technology isn't the bottleneck. A more apt comparison to cryogenic would be alchemy. You could do it on a very small scale, sure. But good luck doing it to a human body and expecting miracles to happen.
It's not new information that Tessier is sharing with us cryonicists. Our main concern is whether the damage that occurs during cryopreservation can be reversed, and we firmly believe that it can. We're already aware of the risks associated with cryoprotectants and fracturing, so it's not telling us anything new. As for the idea that there are ethical and social implications that cast doubt on the benefits of cryonics, it's a bit strange and contradictory. We believe that access to potentially life-saving healthcare is a universal human right and everyone should have the opportunity to benefit from it.
The animals that go into frozen hibernation do so for a short period of time naturally...a human that is frozen for years would have it's organs frozen together....when thawed they would more than likely to be severely damaged..as would joints and bones. Then there's the question of the soul.....love this channel. 🧠
PLEASE UPVOTE Can we use CRISPR to insert the antifreeze proteins into living organisms using a virus. Obv will need some research to work out the snags
I'm living proof that it is possible with the right being. One must posses the complete faith and ability to survive. In the army I spent 6 weeks in jungle school and lost my canteen and water and twice during that time found water. I consumed over 4 gallons and then after getting to the barracks mess Hal drank 24 glasses of milk. Being dehydrated may be the key. In the winter I had no heat and drank some ice cold juice that put me to sleep as if in hibernation with my vital signs greatly reduced. I was talking to a post doc friend from Russia about it and he thought it could be a valuable measure for people to survive who crash land in remote ice capped mountains. I think I could be the first to come back.
Freezing may be simpler than you think, in Iceland there is a frog that is frozen for up to 7 months a year, before freezing the frog boost it's blood sugar over 40 times which stops it's cells from being destroyed while frozen. Sugar is a natural preservative. Freezing may be possible with glucose injections prior to freezing. Should be easy enough to test.
there’s a book by Stanisław Lem called „Fiasko” and its main character is essentially a man who was released from cryopreservation hundreds of years in the future, has no memory of his past life and neither the characters, nor the readers learn who he is. while it’s not a main theme of the novel, it’s still a wonderful read and i reccomend it whole heartedly
If they can only vitrify small pieces at once, then they must disassemble you into a thousand pieces, vitrify then unvitrify them and reassemble successfully. Solved.
That‘d be like cutting a fine fabric into small pieces, storing them and then expecting them to magically connect together again perfectly to form the same quality fabric afterwards
@@waterunderthebridge7950 I found the notion comical in writing it. It could be possible one day, we can reattach digits and limbs, so maybe a good machine can carry the work.
@@DarkKnightBatman420 They do say that sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic but who’s to say human civilization will ever reach that point before inevitably driving itself into an evolutionary corner? Still, however refined any technology is, you’d inevitably encounter Theseus’ paradox in which it becomes unclear whether there can be any continuity of identity with all the modifications being done. But who knows? Maybe then someone’ll also have grasped the construct of the soul or revealed it for the simple biology it is.
Have you seen Altered Carbon? The notion of soul will probably be replaced by identity in the future when we can copy minds and load them into blank humans for war purposes or work.
@@DarkKnightBatman420 The thing is all imagination is starkly limited by present biases. Just like how most people just a few decades ago couldn’t have ever imagined that we’d carry devices with the processing power of the super-computers of that time with us every day; just as much is our current imagination of what could be limited by current (mis)information. As such, there’re endless possibilities of what a “soul” might be or even grounds to invalidate the entire argument; just like how most would frown upon “medical” practice of just several hundred years ago; so could future generations look upon any discussion of identity and self.
What about the effects on the brain and cognition? Even if they overcome all of the hurdles of freezing and thawing without causing any _structural_ damage, what cognitive state would you be in when you were thawed out after being frozen for years/decades?
I mean that's sad, but still, why should it matter for your life? We experience death of loved ones in our lifetime too, so what's the difference. You accept it and continue to live.
The problem is not just preserving a person or safely unfreezing them but what we can actually do with them when they get out. For a long time I thought that people who were cryogenically frozen, in suspended animation or stasis were essentially in a state of deep sleep. But then I looked into it and it turns out they are all DEAD, stone dead, deceased. Indeed they NEED to be in order to undergo the freezing process. The whole concept of cryogenic preservation depends on idea that it is possible to reanimate a dead body if it's preserved well enough. All these technologies actually do is keep a dead body from degrading. So these frozen people are waiting for a future that not only has a cure for what was killing them but the same technology as Frankenstein. And even then we still face the issue of the machinery breaking down or whether these cryogenic companies will be able to exist long enough keep people on ice.
Well, we can already revive some people that didn't pass 6 minutes of clinical death. We've reached 1 hour for some animals. I think it's safe to bet that in the future there could be such technology. And that's the point. Having a tiny probability is better than nothing. About bankruptcy. Serious companies that fo cryonics are non-profit that have a fund which is invested in low-risk plans. This fund covers for your maintenance and should theoretically cover the transfer of your remainins in case of bankrupcy.
@@BioTheHuman Ok but I don't think those animals or people are really dead. And as I said, you need to be completely dead to be cryogenically frozen. And even if it's non-profit organizations who do this, there's still the question of equipment failures, power outages or local disasters.
@@EccentricGentelman What you think is not what reality is. Yes, those people/animals are dead because their heart/brain stopped functioning and in fact we couldn't do nothing some decades ago when science wasn't advanced enough. "you need to be completely dead to be cryogenically frozen." Yeah and you need to be completely dead in order to be revived in our times too. In fact there are people who have "Do not resuscitate" policy (a legal document) which prevent doctors from applying our knowledge of reviving, and in fact they remain dead, so how can you "they're not actually dead"?. "And even if it's non-profit organizations who do this, there's still the question of equipment failures, power outages or local disasters." I would be dead anyway, so why should this matter to me?
You’d need to figure out how to flash-freeze every part of the human body at the same time (flash-freezing prevents ice crystals from destroying frozen food.)
I saw this being tested for use on embryos too. You could basically freeze an embryo for future reimplantation rather than abort it. The only question is whether it even actually works. It’s not cheap either. Last I looked, it can cost around $3k
In response to the question "Would you be willing to upload your mind?"... That wouldn't be you. It would just be a copy of your mind. Imagine somebody growing a clone of you with all of your thoughts and memories duplicated within the clone. You could still be alive and the clone would be alive, thinking it's actually you. That doesn't mean you would see and experience the things that the clone is seeing. That's basically what it would be like to upload your mind to something. Scientists literally can't explain, definitively, what consciousness is and how it operates. We're literally swinging in the dark when it comes to preserving our consciousness outside of our bodies.
I seem to be alone in this, but the idea of a perfect clone replacing me does not sound frightening. If it happened instantenous without me or the clone knowing then what would have changed? Nothing really. One could argue that this truly happens irl too. The atoms of our bodies are constantly replaced by atoms from our environment, get literally replaced by identical clones. We don't notice it, so there's no harm done to anyone.
In a technologically competent Future World where it is both feasible and socially acceptable to live indefinitely in good physical and cognitive shape, people in that era are going to call that state something ordinary like "good health."
Honestly, we're probably gonna get there in at most 50 years, technology is getting more and more advanced by the day and it's only getting faster. One day maybe we'll be able to abandon our weak flesh for the strength and certainty of steel
The idea of cryo is not to revive the body, but to preserve the brain, so that in the future it could be scanned and either reprinted into a new body or run in simulation.
@@shaimach say that when you face your identical twin that is NOT you. It's horrifying. I do seriously hope that medicine advances fast enough so that we can live longer or indefinitely before we go extinct. Call it a dying man's wish
Even if the chances to be revived are very tiny, they're still higher than zero (aka dead and not frozen). If you have the money, I really don't see why you shouldn't try.
Wait, instead of looking for ways to preserve our entire body, why not just find a way to safely remove the brain, and preserve that instead? I mean, that is still gonna be hard, but much easier than preserving an entire body, right?
Pretty sure there's a company that does that already- where they preserve just the head severed from the entire body. Somewhat gruesome if you ask me. There's also this thing with mind-uploading that might be a more feasible goal to preserving someone's consciousness.
@@koshka02Uploading is more feasible and absolutely will be a thing. The issue is that that's not the original person. Someone would be dying so their... Other self can continue on and their loved ones will have them, but not actually them (and who knows whether that's really a comfort). All the while, the original will die and not experience any of it.
@@ElusiveTy that's correct. In the case of uploading, that would be a duplicate, not the original. Unless we figure out how to transfer the actual consciousness of a person?
Sure it is. Every time you seek medical attention you’re trying to push back against death. Every time you breath, eat or drink you’re pushing your life forward against death. Everyone, everything, we consider living is solving the problem of death second by second. Modern medicine is just taking the solving to a way higher level.
I don't feel like dying if I don't have to. Skip the freezing and reanimation, and go straight to immortality with nanomachines, and now you're cooking!
The problem is that soul needs a functioning body to reside in. If you stop the body from functioning, the soul will just leave. Then when you thaw the body it will be useless because its soul has already left.
in the future when we are able to settle the debate of if consciousness can be made if you have a big enough brain or if it's like a spirit that merely inhabits the human body will be interesting
Well, stating the problem like that is like saying "I can't eat this burrito because the peas are frozen" while ignoring that the entire burrito is made out of expired food. The problem isn't just damaging small cells. Let's say that no cell was "damaged" by ice formation in this ideal world. Water does not freeze at a 1:1 volume ratio. Frozen water becomes more compact, meaning that all of the water in the human body would, instead of being evenly distributed, be in clumps all over the body. It also means that water that used to be inside of cells gets out of the cells and joins various clumps of ice. Once someone is frozen like that, they are instantly dead, because there is no way to thaw them in such a way that all of the water returns to where it used to be, meaning that trying to thaw the person will end up melting them entirely, as the cells all lack water and will simply fall off. Most of the body would be liquefied and fall off. As for uploading my mind - no, not as such. There would be no continuity of consciousness, meaning I'd just be copying my mind and creating an AI with my memories and thought pattern. I'd still die off. That might be an acceptable thing to someone who's extremely smart, but my mind isn't worth copying just to have my random thoughts live on in eternity, and it wouldn't mean I live forever. Might as well just write a book if all that's left of me is a memory of who i was. If we ever develop technology to a point where we can store our actual brains and connect them into a virtual space and live entirely in a fictional world, yeah, sure. Then I'd live forever, or however long I feel like, and I wouldn't be creating another lifeform with my memories in some weird aberration of science.
Our dimension is not the only dimension. There are many other forms of dimensions out there. People think this is the only life that we have. They don’t know that our life ends in this dimension and starts in another from scratch again. And this life cycle continues until the final completion. So, let it circulate in its own natural way.
@@onecommunistboi You can’t find fish in sky and bird under the water unless you either fly up into the sky or dive deep into the sea. They don’t know because they’re looking for fish in the sky, not in the water. In a simpler word, they’re searching their answer in a wrong place.
Sorry TED-Ed, you're wrong. Glutaraldehyde prevents ice crystals from forming by locking molecules in place, preserving the cells, genome and brains connectome for possible revival if kept at about -100C. This vid won't age well. 2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
Imagine coming back to life 300 years later with all your memories intact but nobody to materialise them because everybody in those memories is gone … scary.
But if people could revive others, they would try to revive as many people as possible and then the population will grow out of control and everyone will regret it
Was watching this nicely done video and was thinking all the time about writing a comment about plethora ef ethical problems that technology would bring. Very happy to see You did mention it at the end
I can’t believe it will become possible. If we could do such things ,the ecosystem of human being and other animals would be destroyed. I can’t believe this at the same time I don’t want that things become possible.
people of 2023: If I freeze myself future humanity will have the technology to unfreeze me and live forever! 1000 years later ??: this is a human mummy, relatively kept in good shape for being 1000 years old
The physical is temporary, the spiritual is forever.Through Jesus anyone can live forever - with a new body that will never die nor get sick. Those things are the result of sin in the world. Jesus died and rose again from the dead to set us free from sin so all who believe on Him and follow Him can live forever in Heaven - a place that is very real, along with the new Earth where only righteousness will dwell. No more sin, death, sorrow crying, etc.
I really feel left aside hearing and seeing several testimonies from people on profits they make from Bitcoin/Forex Investment... Can someone recommend a good expert that trade on my behalf and generate profit for me..
While it may be far off for an entire person, this opens the door for a great way to preserve donated organs! Instead of rushing to get permission from grieving relatives due to the viability of their deceased loved one's organs, you could just ask for their organs to get vitrified through an injection or something, to be donated at a later date if at all. Organs could even be harvested and stored for later!
You're very enthusiastic about this topic
@gamein I'm just a big fan of biological inventions 😄
@@audhd_incarnate8001 or a big fan of rimworld
Okay that’s smart!!!!
@@cheryl9809 I think we both know what his playstyle would be if he played rimworld
Ted-Ed: You can't be ressurected by being freezed
Walt Disney: I felt that
I don't think he felt that, or ever will actually.
@@mkks4559 he is too chill for that
@@logc1921 Oh cool.
being frozen...
You people are ironically on fire.
Opening: James Bedford froze himself in '67 hoping he'd be revived one day.
TED: Actually, the methods used were way too destructive..
🥺
Can we cure his cancer?
Yes sir
Well do it already
We can't
Why not?
He froze to death sir
R.I.P
Well he was dead already so weather burned, frozen or buried doesn't make much of a difference
what happened to him?
Don't worry, TED-Ed is wrong. There are non-destructive techniques developed recently.
2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation (ytube also)
Ted Ed single handedly crushed those who's relatives are cryogenically preserved 💀
Crushed them... like ice
Imma head out...
Better say the truth than spread lies.
Honestly, makes me sad. As humans we live on hope but there is a line between hope and delusion.
@@NA-AN Theranos
@C @C The future is always in the future. This is a fraud of the highest order. It is like I owe you money, and will pay you sometime in the future, anytime
The field of humancryopreservation is lagging behind ... I work in plant cryopreservation and we are able to cryopreserve 1mm³ sized shoot meristem AND plant these plantlets in the field afterwards. Cryopreservation of plant tissue is an important part of gene banking and storing diversity.
Wow, that's really cool. How long were the plantlets preserved for prior to planting and germination? And how many grew afterwards? I'm very curious.
@@justanotherloki5569 it all depends a bit, when developing protocols we store them for at least 30 min, as the material should not change anymore once cooled. I helped develop such a protocol for sweet potato shoots and there we saw some differences between some of our varieties we had 2 where more than 90 % of the material we cryopreserved was able to regenerate into a normal plant and 1 where only 10 % did that. Luckily most of the ones we store have a regeneration rate of more than 50%. These % are species and cultivar dependent. But because we work with clonal material and back ups if some of them die it's not a problem. Other people from my lab are also validating long term storage where they regenerate banana plantlets that have been stored for multiple years. Meanwhile we store hundreds banana accessions which had successfull trials.
Yeah, but they have cell walls 🥺
However in human cryopreservation, the ethical problem is one of the major factors that makes it lag out compared to plants. Also plant cellular structure allows an easier temperature manipulation.
2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
TED's info is outdated for some reason.
I'm surprised that the freezing of human embryos was never brought up in this video. In a way, we can already freeze humans and bring them back to life. The challenge is figuring out how to do it with a fully grown human.
Ah you're right... Damn
Embryos aren’t still humans.
Bet they didn’t want to set off the magas
Yup
It is the same technique actually
I always wondered even if this was possible, would you have the same personality when thawed and if you didn't would you still be you.
You're not even the same you from 1 second ago. Continuity of identity is an illusion.
@@dangerfly whoa! 👍👍
@@dangerfly That would be somewhat true, if time was not continuous and we know that it is continuous.
@@kompatybilijny9348 Time is continuous, but not our cells as most are replaced 10 years later yet we still believe that's us (Ship of Theseus). We're constantly changing on a cellular level imperceptibly so therefore our sense of identity is illusory.
@@dangerfly Except that the correct solution to the ship of theseus is that an object/creature remains the same creature regardless of how many parts of it you replace, as long as that object/creature has continuously existed during that process. Even If I replaced a part of my brain with a perfect simulation of that part of my brain, I would remain the same person. Then I could move on and continue to replace more parts of my brain with simmilar simulations until I was a fully synthetic being, I would remian the same person. And if someone managed to rebuild the old organic brain from original parts, the person created in that process did not exist before his/her creation and therefore is a copy, despite being made out of original parts.
imagine coming back to life and then having to go back to your cubicle work life for all eternity. lovely.
Much better than dont exist at all.
yeah it's only rich people doing this to themselves
Hopefully you're revived in the future where robots have replaced cubicle workers.
gotta repay the maintenance costs from the freezer you were in for 100 years
@@reyne2077 Some would disagree
Ted ed you could publish some textbook. I would gladly study it. Your videos are really interesting. 🙂
TED was lazy on this one, we can preserve cells without ice formation or damage.
2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
I don’t want the red blood cell to be frozen it’s so cute!
Agreed
Me too!!
Thanks to the animator
I got bad news
4:52 So basically it is possible only there’s a “moral issue’” with it. Sign me up. Better than just tossing me in the dirt.
They got this working very reliably in the 60s using only microwave ovens and conventional refrigeration. It only worked on small mammals though. Tom Scott did a video on it.
Except the point he made on that is it doesn't scale up. You can't properly preserve or thaw a person as quickly as a small gerbil
Link pls
@@tonyatthebeach ua-cam.com/video/2tdiKTSdE9Y/v-deo.html
@@tonyatthebeach ua-cam.com/video/2tdiKTSdE9Y/v-deo.html
@@DasSlenderMan Thanks
I like the method where they take all your blood out replace it with a cold blue fluid and then perform brain surgury that can only be done with no blood flow, then they take out the blue fluid, pump your blood back in, warm you up and your good as new. I think its one of the coolest things out there. Not literally cool though, it cools the body to like 20 degrees, cold for body temperature but pretty nice for room temperature.
It's Gatorade
Some thoughts and questions:
• Will a person preserved and revived through cryobiology methods have the same qualities, skills, and abilities before his natural death? If physical damage has been done to the body and the mind, by what percentage will they reduce?
• If the concept of the 'Atman' is true, what happens to it when the person is in preservation?
• Legal consequences: Interim death certificates have to be issued to those who opt for cryogenic preservation which will be scrapped when they're revived. The hospital or the laboratory will contact the family and some government officials to decide if the person should be revived and who will look after him (accommodation, food, etc.); the government may take responsibility for those who don't have family and can contribute to the country's progress. This will help avoid both civil and criminal issues.
• Social consequences: Whether or not the person can reproduce after being revived? If yes, will they have normal babies or be physically disabled?
• Economic consequences: More competition for jobs.
The last question doesnt make sense. More people wont neccessarily equate to more competition. A greater worker force however is needed to keep up any govnerment.
Also, for your first question, no idea. As mentioned in the video, cryobiology cant exactly revive you. But lets say it did, then the amount of damage or changes done to the brain be the biggest factor in what you need to relearn, and it depends entirely on where the damage is, which no one would know.
@@slampestlol, the last point is leveraged against litteraly any new technology "this new wondrous technology has a possiblity to decrease employment for a short time, let's shut it down lads. And while we are at it let's throw out the steam engine, electricity, printing press, automobiles, etc. And go back to serfdom where there was 100% employment 100% of the time"
Are you aware that you have to be legally dead before they can freeze you? It would be unethical to freeze a living person, so they have to have a doctor pronounce them dead, then freeze them as quick as possible. Then, hypothetically, hundreds of years in the future when we invent magic movie defibrillators that bring people back to life, *_and_* we develop a cure for whatever disease they died from, _then_ they can be brought back.
I think we're more likely to store human's "data" as an AI and have that AI live forever, rather than a human body living forever
I love that idea! I can annoy my besties even after my death.
That would just be your data ran by algorithm. It won't copy your consciousness.
Cyberpunk 2077 did a good job explaining why this sucks or SOMA if you are into the less known video games. SOMA is a nightmare of the issues of this. You are not your body, you are not even your brain. The closest thing to actually being you is an electrical loop in your brain. Not THE brain, a loop inside of it. This is important, because when that loop ends by any of many different things, you stop being "You". This has been observed in countless studies, someone was dead a little too long before being resuscitated, part of their brain was removed or damaged, a disease caused atrophy or inflammation in key areas, or even just you aged and certain electrical pathways in your brain opened up or deprecated.
Trying to copy that electrical loop, which was created by gradual changes over time to match the circuits created in the brain specifically to accommodate that loop, into a construct, which by design has to have a uniform system of operation is almost bordering on the levels of magical rather than scientific. We're basically talking here that in order for that to be possible, they need to not only have a way to capture the original loop without distorting it, but also create a 1:1 perfect replica of the existing circuit into the circuitry of the machine for every person they do this with. I didn't even go into the higher level stuff how you're not just 1 electrical loop, you're 2 loops that connect to a single completely separate loop while still being their own loops. So they basically need to copy all 3 of your loops AND keep them separated but specifically two of them are able to communicate to the 3rd one or again you become a different person.
well idk we are far away from any computer having the amount of connections a human brains does so right now even if we could get the data we couldnt run your consciousness on anything. Creating these kind of algorithims will be tough as well
Like Vanilla Sky?
If they could preserve the brain, without damaging it, that will be good enough. In theory, a new body could be created (a biologic or mechanical one) to serve as vessel for the brain. Personally, I would go with that option, since it only requires the preservation of a single organ.
Do you have any idea how complex the brain is? There are thousands of connections that have to be made properly
how would the brain get nourishment?
@@VeryRGOTI it doesn't need
@@purple.requiem It will need nourishment ALOT of nourishment. If the brain gets a robotic vessel it can control the brain will still be a biological organ and need food energy to survive.
@@VeryRGOTI at that state the all of the brain activities are halted. So it doesn't need any energy to operate as it's not even operating in the first place
Loving this video, I probably won't be frozen anytime soon... but this is still crazy to think about!
Me: "I want to live forever"
Water: "I'm gonna end this man's life"
The voice-over in this video is mesmerizing! I want more!
Seeee these videos ask such good questions. Like questions I didn't even know I had and then I need to watch them
In fiction, yes.
In reality, you’re in icy, icy heaven. Literally.
heaven doesn't exists literally
Wrong.
Imagine they are still spiritual aware and feel everything
@@crosshant4596 that be pure suffering than the underworld itself
What ted ed is missing is that it doesn't have to be revived. The brain just has to be analysed to be reconstructed.
To say that it's proven is right but to say that it can't be done is baseless, it's like claiming an ASI can't exist because it doesn't exist today.
So it works perfectly. Thanks Ted Ed!
What about harnessing and building on the limitations of natural hibernation to achieve something similar to the stasis sleep of sci-fi movies. It could be useful for things like trips to Mars, where one or two of the crew are awake in 6 month shifts, putting down the previous shift, fine tuning instruments, ensuring the snoozing crew's muscles do not atrophy, other astronaut chores, waking up the next shift. The crew do not age the full 5 years the trip would take thanks to the extremely slowed metabolic rate caused by hibernation. Though before that we'd need to crack the nascent potential of the axolotl in paralell to hibernation to avoid any complications with the human hibernation process if it has any chance of working.
lol in space travel how much time they experience is entirely up to the tech they have driving the ship. Time is relative and the less gravity you experience, the more time passes for you. This is a bad thing, it means you're aging much faster regardless of hibernation stuff. Having literally 0 gravity is the worst situation. If the ship travels at light speed then it's technically worse as this got explained in the book "The Forever War" where just traveling from one planet to another planet fucks up the time for all 3 places to such an extreme that by the time you reach the other planet they have forgotten about you and are probably so much more advanced they will annihilate you effortlessly.
In a nutshell, if they have ships like we use now... They will age drastically faster.
If they have a ship traveling at light speed... They will drastically slow aging while both planets undergo many, many years of aging.
If they travel faster than light... They will go backwards in time. Where they somehow arrive at the destination before they left the previous location. Probably should hope those are only one way trips.
@@setcheck67 Lightspeed? What has that got to do with induced hibernation... You completely missed the point of my comment, and I have no idea where to begin in trying to understand the relevance of your rabbit hole tangent. If you haven't misunderstood the author of this "forever war" you referred to, as you have my comment, the book's author should've conducted further research to prevent misconceptions like yours. Misinformation can be harmful.
TED-Ed was lazy with their research on this one.
2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
I just watched Vsause's Mind Field video called "should I die" and Kurzgesagt's video on how life is made of dead things, and then this shows up in my feed...
I think it parallels Egyptian mummies to preserve bodies for another life. True, now our methods are 'scientific', and with more equipments, but the motive is similar. Fear of death is a real thing for humanity. Huh history repeats itself. For me, I'd rather RIP when I die than hang on futilely to life.
There's this show I watch called Manifest. It's about a plane that came back 5 1/2 after it took off. In one episode, you learn that some of the passengers had no one waiting for them when they came back which meant they had no where to go after the plane ride. When you think about it, would cryogenically freezing yourself be worth it if there's no one to greet you when you come out? In fact, there a couple of episodes of Batman TAS which addressed the idea of cryogenically freezing someone with a terminal illness until a cure was found. Our technology might be more advanced now than it was back when the show first came on but we're still no closer to finding a cure for cancer than we are to inventing flying cars.
I literally watched the Batman episode today where Freeze tries to preserve his wife 😂
Technology is growing in a faster and faster rate every year. I’m pretty young right now, so I guarantee we’ll think of something by the time i die. assuming I don’t die young in some horrific accident or something
funny you mention flying cars. we don't have flying cars today because they are loud, take up ridiculous amount of space at both the air and ground infrastructure, and the least unsustainable mode of transport - just like regular cars. The technology isn't the bottleneck.
A more apt comparison to cryogenic would be alchemy. You could do it on a very small scale, sure. But good luck doing it to a human body and expecting miracles to happen.
5 1/2 what?
@@suomeaboo Oh sorry. I forgot to put 'years' after 5 1/2.
Its a matter of time till we figure it out, those who doubt it just do not believe in human ingenuity enough
I believe in it. We just need to fund this and work on this and we will eventually be able to do it. Hopefully.
This is the first time I hear about cryonics, it is interesting.
It's not new information that Tessier is sharing with us cryonicists. Our main concern is whether the damage that occurs during cryopreservation can be reversed, and we firmly believe that it can. We're already aware of the risks associated with cryoprotectants and fracturing, so it's not telling us anything new. As for the idea that there are ethical and social implications that cast doubt on the benefits of cryonics, it's a bit strange and contradictory. We believe that access to potentially life-saving healthcare is a universal human right and everyone should have the opportunity to benefit from it.
The animals that go into frozen hibernation do so for a short period of time naturally...a human that is frozen for years would have it's organs frozen together....when thawed they would more than likely to be severely damaged..as would joints and bones. Then there's the question of the soul.....love this channel. 🧠
Except the soul part, as there is no soul, we are just a bunch of complex chemicals interacting in complex ways
@@sleepyfella okay...that's a matter of opinion...there are a few Billion that would disagree with you. Let's substitute soul with spark then.
@@MaxMoon65 there is not a single evidence for soul
@@commandvideo there is not a shred of evidence that proves that a soul DOESN'T exist.
@@MaxMoon65 hehe you don't disprove something. The burden of proving something is on the claimant .
PLEASE UPVOTE
Can we use CRISPR to insert the antifreeze proteins into living organisms using a virus.
Obv will need some research to work out the snags
I'm living proof that it is possible with the right being. One must posses the complete faith and ability to survive. In the army I spent 6 weeks in jungle school and lost my canteen and water and twice during that time found water. I consumed over 4 gallons and then after getting to the barracks mess Hal drank 24 glasses of milk. Being dehydrated may be the key. In the winter I had no heat and drank some ice cold juice that put me to sleep as if in hibernation with my vital signs greatly reduced. I was talking to a post doc friend from Russia about it and he thought it could be a valuable measure for people to survive who crash land in remote ice capped mountains. I think I could be the first to come back.
I wish to live infinitely ♾️
Not only for millions of years but forever 💔
“ Life is a priceless treasure “ Mrah Bn Thohl (Arabian wisdom)
Same :)
Same.
Discovering cryionics actually gave me vitality.
It's not that expensive and the possible winning is enourmous.
Freezing may be simpler than you think, in Iceland there is a frog that is frozen for up to 7 months a year, before freezing the frog boost it's blood sugar over 40 times which stops it's cells from being destroyed while frozen. Sugar is a natural preservative. Freezing may be possible with glucose injections prior to freezing. Should be easy enough to test.
Why would anyone wanna cheat death if you get to go to heaven and live forever.
That's my question as well. We humans are too attached to this world that we don't want leave it at all.
"I had a date..."
-Steve Rogers
"Will you go penguin sledding with me?"
-Avatar Aang
there’s a book by Stanisław Lem called „Fiasko” and its main character is essentially a man who was released from cryopreservation hundreds of years in the future, has no memory of his past life and neither the characters, nor the readers learn who he is. while it’s not a main theme of the novel, it’s still a wonderful read and i reccomend it whole heartedly
Legend has it that scientist is still tightening that bolt.
I can't believe I'm so early! I love your videos TED-Ed they're so awesome and interesting.
If they can only vitrify small pieces at once, then they must disassemble you into a thousand pieces, vitrify then unvitrify them and reassemble successfully. Solved.
That‘d be like cutting a fine fabric into small pieces, storing them and then expecting them to magically connect together again perfectly to form the same quality fabric afterwards
@@waterunderthebridge7950 I found the notion comical in writing it. It could be possible one day, we can reattach digits and limbs, so maybe a good machine can carry the work.
@@DarkKnightBatman420 They do say that sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic but who’s to say human civilization will ever reach that point before inevitably driving itself into an evolutionary corner?
Still, however refined any technology is, you’d inevitably encounter Theseus’ paradox in which it becomes unclear whether there can be any continuity of identity with all the modifications being done. But who knows? Maybe then someone’ll also have grasped the construct of the soul or revealed it for the simple biology it is.
Have you seen Altered Carbon? The notion of soul will probably be replaced by identity in the future when we can copy minds and load them into blank humans for war purposes or work.
@@DarkKnightBatman420 The thing is all imagination is starkly limited by present biases. Just like how most people just a few decades ago couldn’t have ever imagined that we’d carry devices with the processing power of the super-computers of that time with us every day; just as much is our current imagination of what could be limited by current (mis)information.
As such, there’re endless possibilities of what a “soul” might be or even grounds to invalidate the entire argument; just like how most would frown upon “medical” practice of just several hundred years ago; so could future generations look upon any discussion of identity and self.
Bro this channel always has interesting topics
fr
What about the effects on the brain and cognition? Even if they overcome all of the hurdles of freezing and thawing without causing any _structural_ damage, what cognitive state would you be in when you were thawed out after being frozen for years/decades?
FFFFUUTURRRE!
I only hope that when freezing ourselves for preservation becomes possible one day, that it's used for good.
If you were able to come back in the future,everyone you ever known will be gone,so that's something to think about.
Not a problem for me, I don't like anyone I've ever known.
Not if they are cryopreserved too.
That happens to people any way when they live long enough.
Why would I be the only person to come back?
I mean that's sad, but still, why should it matter for your life?
We experience death of loved ones in our lifetime too, so what's the difference.
You accept it and continue to live.
The problem is not just preserving a person or safely unfreezing them but what we can actually do with them when they get out.
For a long time I thought that people who were cryogenically frozen, in suspended animation or stasis were essentially in a state of deep sleep. But then I looked into it and it turns out they are all DEAD, stone dead, deceased. Indeed they NEED to be in order to undergo the freezing process.
The whole concept of cryogenic preservation depends on idea that it is possible to reanimate a dead body if it's preserved well enough. All these technologies actually do is keep a dead body from degrading. So these frozen people are waiting for a future that not only has a cure for what was killing them but the same technology as Frankenstein.
And even then we still face the issue of the machinery breaking down or whether these cryogenic companies will be able to exist long enough keep people on ice.
Well, we can already revive some people that didn't pass 6 minutes of clinical death.
We've reached 1 hour for some animals.
I think it's safe to bet that in the future there could be such technology.
And that's the point.
Having a tiny probability is better than nothing.
About bankruptcy. Serious companies that fo cryonics are non-profit that have a fund which is invested in low-risk plans.
This fund covers for your maintenance and should theoretically cover the transfer of your remainins in case of bankrupcy.
@@BioTheHuman Ok but I don't think those animals or people are really dead.
And as I said, you need to be completely dead to be cryogenically frozen.
And even if it's non-profit organizations who do this, there's still the question of equipment failures, power outages or local disasters.
@@EccentricGentelman What you think is not what reality is.
Yes, those people/animals are dead because their heart/brain stopped functioning and in fact we couldn't do nothing some decades ago when science wasn't advanced enough.
"you need to be completely dead to be cryogenically frozen." Yeah and you need to be completely dead in order to be revived in our times too. In fact there are people who have "Do not resuscitate" policy (a legal document) which prevent doctors from applying our knowledge of reviving, and in fact they remain dead, so how can you "they're not actually dead"?.
"And even if it's non-profit organizations who do this, there's still the question of equipment failures, power outages or local disasters."
I would be dead anyway, so why should this matter to me?
You’d need to figure out how to flash-freeze every part of the human body at the same time (flash-freezing prevents ice crystals from destroying frozen food.)
Flash-frozen food companies do this by pressing the food using chilled metal plates.
Hopes this helps! :)
I saw this being tested for use on embryos too. You could basically freeze an embryo for future reimplantation rather than abort it. The only question is whether it even actually works. It’s not cheap either. Last I looked, it can cost around $3k
hjelp meg
We can freeze the body, but... then it's over.
In response to the question "Would you be willing to upload your mind?"... That wouldn't be you. It would just be a copy of your mind. Imagine somebody growing a clone of you with all of your thoughts and memories duplicated within the clone. You could still be alive and the clone would be alive, thinking it's actually you. That doesn't mean you would see and experience the things that the clone is seeing. That's basically what it would be like to upload your mind to something. Scientists literally can't explain, definitively, what consciousness is and how it operates. We're literally swinging in the dark when it comes to preserving our consciousness outside of our bodies.
I seem to be alone in this, but the idea of a perfect clone replacing me does not sound frightening. If it happened instantenous without me or the clone knowing then what would have changed? Nothing really.
One could argue that this truly happens irl too. The atoms of our bodies are constantly replaced by atoms from our environment, get literally replaced by identical clones. We don't notice it, so there's no harm done to anyone.
Yes. That would be photocopy of the original and not the original itself.
In a technologically competent Future World where it is both feasible and socially acceptable to live indefinitely in good physical and cognitive shape, people in that era are going to call that state something ordinary like "good health."
It's *impossible* that I'm not living forever
I liked the way "ice problem" was used as a reference to MCU 👌IYKYK
The cutest red blood cell of the year
If i was to be frozen for decades, ill be upset because my family and friends are gone.
Sad but in time i move on
Yes you can. In know that because I've seen it in cartoons.
/s
Living once in this world, one has to be crazy to even think of coming back.
Honestly, we're probably gonna get there in at most 50 years, technology is getting more and more advanced by the day and it's only getting faster. One day maybe we'll be able to abandon our weak flesh for the strength and certainty of steel
Wow I was literally thinking about all that and Today my thinking n all vanished away
In before a bunch of copium comments about how living forever is bad.
In the Quran, God promises, “Every soul will taste death. Then to Us will you be returned” (29:57).
The idea of cryo is not to revive the body, but to preserve the brain, so that in the future it could be scanned and either reprinted into a new body or run in simulation.
At that point though, would there be a reason to?
Which is precisely in the same realm of far future tech. And we have no clue if we can even do it
Doesn't this mean it's just a copy of the person, not the person himself? The frozen brain is still dead though.
@@MuhamadFarhanIbrahim I see no meaningful difference between the copy of a person's mental processing and the person itself.
@@shaimach say that when you face your identical twin that is NOT you. It's horrifying. I do seriously hope that medicine advances fast enough so that we can live longer or indefinitely before we go extinct. Call it a dying man's wish
Another day of Ted ED spiting facts
man u guys just crushed my icy dreams 😔
Even if the chances to be revived are very tiny, they're still higher than zero (aka dead and not frozen).
If you have the money, I really don't see why you shouldn't try.
ALWAYS ASK THIS UPON LOOKING AT THE BEATIFUL NIGHT SKY
Wait, instead of looking for ways to preserve our entire body, why not just find a way to safely remove the brain, and preserve that instead? I mean, that is still gonna be hard, but much easier than preserving an entire body, right?
This is already a thing, check out Vsauce’s MindField episode “Should I Die?”
Which poses another question; if you preserve a brain, how are you going to make that person able to interact with reality again?
Pretty sure there's a company that does that already- where they preserve just the head severed from the entire body.
Somewhat gruesome if you ask me.
There's also this thing with mind-uploading that might be a more feasible goal to preserving someone's consciousness.
@@koshka02Uploading is more feasible and absolutely will be a thing. The issue is that that's not the original person. Someone would be dying so their... Other self can continue on and their loved ones will have them, but not actually them (and who knows whether that's really a comfort). All the while, the original will die and not experience any of it.
@@ElusiveTy that's correct. In the case of uploading, that would be a duplicate, not the original.
Unless we figure out how to transfer the actual consciousness of a person?
Imagine waking up now? Eff that, send me back to the 90's
Im Gonna Watch This Again If Someone Found a Mummy in Antarctica or The Arctic
Hear me out: taking out the air and THEN freezing the person
The issue is seeing death as a problem to solve, when it's not.
Sure it is. Every time you seek medical attention you’re trying to push back against death. Every time you breath, eat or drink you’re pushing your life forward against death. Everyone, everything, we consider living is solving the problem of death second by second. Modern medicine is just taking the solving to a way higher level.
I don't feel like dying if I don't have to. Skip the freezing and reanimation, and go straight to immortality with nanomachines, and now you're cooking!
Aging is literally a disease, go look up David Sinclair
So if you want to delay death by 20 years by getting a heart transplant that's OK, but when you want to delay death by 100 years it's asking too much?
Mr. Axelband's class @ Hastings Middle School in Upper Arlington, OH - Go Bears!
The problem is that soul needs a functioning body to reside in. If you stop the body from functioning, the soul will just leave. Then when you thaw the body it will be useless because its soul has already left.
How do you know this?
@@onecommunistboi your mum
@@potapotapotapotapotapota Wow, that escalated quickly
@@onecommunistboi she is very wise
in the future when we are able to settle the debate of if consciousness can be made if you have a big enough brain or if it's like a spirit that merely inhabits the human body will be interesting
Well, stating the problem like that is like saying "I can't eat this burrito because the peas are frozen" while ignoring that the entire burrito is made out of expired food.
The problem isn't just damaging small cells. Let's say that no cell was "damaged" by ice formation in this ideal world.
Water does not freeze at a 1:1 volume ratio. Frozen water becomes more compact, meaning that all of the water in the human body would, instead of being evenly distributed, be in clumps all over the body. It also means that water that used to be inside of cells gets out of the cells and joins various clumps of ice. Once someone is frozen like that, they are instantly dead, because there is no way to thaw them in such a way that all of the water returns to where it used to be, meaning that trying to thaw the person will end up melting them entirely, as the cells all lack water and will simply fall off. Most of the body would be liquefied and fall off.
As for uploading my mind - no, not as such. There would be no continuity of consciousness, meaning I'd just be copying my mind and creating an AI with my memories and thought pattern. I'd still die off. That might be an acceptable thing to someone who's extremely smart, but my mind isn't worth copying just to have my random thoughts live on in eternity, and it wouldn't mean I live forever. Might as well just write a book if all that's left of me is a memory of who i was. If we ever develop technology to a point where we can store our actual brains and connect them into a virtual space and live entirely in a fictional world, yeah, sure. Then I'd live forever, or however long I feel like, and I wouldn't be creating another lifeform with my memories in some weird aberration of science.
Our dimension is not the only dimension. There are many other forms of dimensions out there. People think this is the only life that we have. They don’t know that our life ends in this dimension and starts in another from scratch again. And this life cycle continues until the final completion. So, let it circulate in its own natural way.
If they don't know, how can you know?
@@onecommunistboi You can’t find fish in sky and bird under the water unless you either fly up into the sky or dive deep into the sea. They don’t know because they’re looking for fish in the sky, not in the water. In a simpler word, they’re searching their answer in a wrong place.
@@cyrusthegreat1893 So you are looking in the right place? What place is that?
@@onecommunistboi It’s a different world altogether. You can never find a different world in our world.
@@cyrusthegreat1893 If you can't find these worlds in our world, how did you find them?
in any case, frozen people have a million more chances at being resurrected than buried people, and a sextillion more chances than cremated ones
Agreed. Yep.
first and nice! work mah dudes(and dudettes)
what
@@ItsJJOLO sshh don’t ask how it works
Not cool
@@DieMentor how so mr.anti social bucko
Dudettes lol
Sorry TED-Ed, you're wrong.
Glutaraldehyde prevents ice crystals from forming by locking molecules in place, preserving the cells, genome and brains connectome for possible revival if kept at about -100C. This vid won't age well.
2015 research paper keywords- Robert McIntyre aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation
What if we freeze-dried someone beforehand?
Also, does this make them technical zombies after reviving?
I would not want to upload my mind unless my consciousness could somehow be transferred too
Who knows what the technology will be in the future?
Scientists might be able to just retrieve the data from the brain, not the entire body.
Mhm
Just enjoy life now and work to make a better world for now and the future you’ll never know.
We are in a long way to revive another captain america
Still gonna do it. Already knew it was a big risk but 1 percent is still bigger than 0.
Imagine coming back to life 300 years later with all your memories intact but nobody to materialise them because everybody in those memories is gone … scary.
Perhaps, but no different to losing loved ones today. We move forward, we find new people.
The cartoon in this video is just too cute!
But if people could revive others, they would try to revive as many people as possible and then the population will grow out of control and everyone will regret it
Actually it's quite likely that, if humanity survives, will have some serious depopulation problems.
You can already see it in first world countries.
That little red blood cell is so cute! I love it!
I'd imagine the people tasked with "reviving" the body would unanimously agree bringing back anybody from our era is a bad idea.
If im dying anyways why not
Was watching this nicely done video and was thinking all the time about writing a comment about plethora ef ethical problems that technology would bring. Very happy to see You did mention it at the end
I can’t believe it will become possible. If we could do such things ,the ecosystem of human being and other animals would be destroyed. I can’t believe this at the same time I don’t want that things become possible.
Actually that would help in some aspects like travelling to far away stars as we can't live that long normally
That’s right,I didn’t have the viewpoint .in the long run, the possibility to go to star is high. So I wish this system will be used such right ways.
i hope one day they will find solution for this.
Ted Ed is the best. If you agree then like this comment 👍
Yea, I've had this guy in my freezer for a while and he's definitely not coming back.
No I don’t want to imprison my soul.
Iron man knew how to fix the icing problem
people of 2023: If I freeze myself future humanity will have the technology to unfreeze me and live forever!
1000 years later
??: this is a human mummy, relatively kept in good shape for being 1000 years old
I guess he did survive since hes now alive once again via this video and into the mind
Me : who randomly cryogeniteclly froze myself
My mom : Wake up!! Time for school
The physical is temporary, the spiritual is forever.Through Jesus anyone can live forever - with a new body that will never die nor get sick. Those things are the result of sin in the world. Jesus died and rose again from the dead to set us free from sin so all who believe on Him and follow Him can live forever in Heaven - a place that is very real, along with the new Earth where only righteousness will dwell. No more sin, death, sorrow crying, etc.
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