Though no frozen humans have yet been revived, cryonics has been an industry for over fifty years. In that time, focus has shifted slightly. Lately, the emphasis has been more on brain emulation: ...
Bart Kosko, a professor of electrical engineering at USC and author of "Heaven in a Chip" (Random House, 2000), is on the science advisory board of the nonprofit Alcor cryonics corporation. Go ahead ...
On this week's episode, we ask if the B.C. government should charge for water it's currently giving to companies for free, we speak with a man who is fighting for the right to freeze his corpse, and ...
SALEM, Ore. (KOIN) — A Salem non-profit, Oregon Cryonics, is freezing human brains for future use. It is one of only four facilities around the world. Three are in the U.S. and the other is in Russia.
Such is the breathtaking pace of modern scientific advancement that in the three short years since the technicians at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation famously severed baseball star Ted Williams’ ...
Science has been tackling new ways to stop death, which includes diving into the world of cryonics. Cryonics is an experimental effort to save lives by freezing a person's body who is so chronically ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Klaus Sames, a retired gerontologist and cryonics pioneer, sits at a table during a press conference at his house. Sames is ...
2002-08-09 04:00:00 PDT Boston-- The Ted Williams estate says it is dropping its objection to sending the Red Sox legend's remains to an Arizona cryonics warehouse, although the dispute is most likely ...
An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link Over 100,000 people die each day globally. Why don't more of us consider cryonics — the practice of freezing the clinically dead in the hopes of ...
Mateo Gil's 'Realive' shows that life after death isn't all it's cracked up to be. By Aaron Couch Realive Still - Publicity - H 2016 It’s not that he’s particularly enamored with the idea of freezing ...
TV and radio legend Larry King, who hosts two web-based shows on Ora TV, loves cryonics. In an interview with Reason, the 81-year-old talker extraordinaire explains why. And dishes on politics (he's ...
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