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Colonies of Immortals May Appear In Next 50 Years

Biology Tuesday, July 8, 2003 . This is a SciScoop post by Ricky James

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The notion of criotherapy appeared in 1975 in Japan. Japanese scientist Tosimo Yamauchi was watching rheumatoid arthritis patients when he suddenly discovered the positive influence of the cold on joints. Olga Gorishnaya, from the Institute of Ecology and Evolution, said: “It was Tosimo Yamauchi who suggested using the cold air 100-180 degrees below zero (Celsius) to treat patients. He even built the first criosauna for those purposes.”

Soon after that, doctors attempted to treat skin diseases, colds, asthma and even snoring. A criosauna can be a very good stimulant for the immune system; it is also beneficial to help people who struggle with excess weight: the intense heat emission cuts both age and weight.

“A criosauna is not the only way to conquer death with the help of the cold air. Scientists often talk about crionika, when people can be frozen and then revived in the future. This idea has been widely used in science fiction, but it is becoming real nowadays,” Olga Gorishnaya said.

Crionika can be considered as a variant of a funeral ritual. In the USA, wealthy people already have an opportunity to choose whether they want to be just buried in the ground or frozen until humanity invents a reviving technology. What about being frozen before the physical death?

“Ice crystals do not destroy cells; they just cut them into two,” Olga Gorishnaya says. “A fish in a freezer does not turn to a  minced fish, a fish will remain the same; it will simply be frozen.  Something like that will happen if you put a living fish in a freezer, although it will not be possible to bring it back to life later on. Certain conditions are needed to make a cell live and work.”

Scientists believe an ice-cut cell will live again if one “sews” it together. Such methods have already been developed  within the scope of the scientific direction, which is called the nanotechnology. “It goes about the invention of a device which could be capable of working with molecules and atoms, ” Rudolf Nesmelov, from the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physics, explains. “This device is very small, one-billionth of one meter. Japanese scientists have already invented tiny molecule-sized robots outfitted with sensors and minicomputers. We have our developments in Russia as well. It will be possible to talk about experiments on living beings in 10 or 15 years. If they yield positive results, experiments on humans will be launched, too. Molecular surgery is the restoration of a partially destroyed cell by means of manipulation with certain molecules, which may solve the immortality problem.”

Rudolf Nesmelov says this fantastic situation can develop as follows. A human body is frozen  in 2003, and then it is defrozen in 2033, for instance. Molecular robots start working in the body at once, analyzing the damage which is caused from dying, freezing and storing periods. Robots exchange the information with each other and with the control computer outside the body. According to the analysis, robots repair the damage, revitalize, and treat cells.

Storing a frozen body in a freezer is not necessary for such technologies. One can renew a human body several times during its life, making it last much longer. When molecular robots finish their work, they go out of a body either through circulatory or breathing systems. A 200-year-old man will feel like a young man again.

Mikhail Solovyov, Doctor of Medical Sciences, one of the main proponents of crionika, suggests an idea of an immortal society. The scientist says that there will be special farms built for the purpose, equipped with liquid nitrogen-producing devices. Crionika might become a cheap service which will be available for many people: the price will be around $2,000 for a body. People will practically stop dying. Solovyov says this idea may become true in about 20 years.

Crionika has an ethical aspect, too. Will a person manage to adapt to a completely new life in 100 or 200 years? It is not unforeseeable that a “resurrected” person might become insane, or a person might be completely disappointed in the new life. One should think about these issues before a colony of immortals appears.

Pravda source – English version)

3 Responses to Colonies of Immortals May Appear In Next 50 Years

xanadu

July 8th, 2003 at 2:39 pm

Doesn’t Russia have the highest rate of Alcoholism in the world? Can’t be immortal if you die of liver/heart failure…

The blurb at the top of the page about the moon being 35 feet of above the earth and killing the tallest dinosaurs is great… I got a good laugh from that.

-Andy

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machtabow

December 12th, 2003 at 9:04 pm

If it helps…. There is a type of fish in Michigan that my siblings and I froze often in a freezer. When we unthawed these fish…. they came back to life! Questions: contact machtabow@yahoo.com

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Anonymous

June 8th, 2004 at 4:31 pm

that was freaking lame

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