You know it's going to happen. One day we'll reanimate a dead, cryogenically frozen brain and that person will say, "wow, it was just total black nothingness. I simply ceased to exist."
Finally, we'll be able to put all this god and religion nonsense to bed once and for all, and humanity can finally get its act together.
I can't wait!
2007-01-16
13:46:07
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26 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
Bender R,
Well, if you knew anything about Cryonics, you'd know they've already solved that problem.
2007-01-16
13:51:48 ·
update #1
Reanimating the dead is not the same as resurrecting the dead. Re-creating the body as a whole, from dirt, than placing into that body everything that the person was. That data would be equal to 40MBs of data per second, times the number of seconds in a person's life. Know any computers that could hold that much data? I think it works out to over 100 petabytes.
Reanimating a preserved body, where the chemical bounds that make up memory have been frozen in place by the cryogenic process is not nearly the same as resurrecting a person.
2007-01-16 14:00:37
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Since everyone dies of the same thing, namely cerebral anoxia, it doesn't seem likely. Once your brain is dead, you're dead. End of story. Cryogenics is one of the pipe-dreams of the folks who watch the "Sci-Fi Channel." Brain cells cannot be reanimated. Not going to happen, dude. Makes for good reading, though. Stephen King would have a good time with the concept.
2007-01-16 21:57:52
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answer #2
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answered by link955 7
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What you just said makes no sense. "Wow, it was total black, nothingness. I ceased to exist." Yet they're back? And they were conscious of not existing? Uhhhh....yeah, sure...and people say us Christians are kooky.
Anyway, it won't happen b/c it's scientifically impossible. I just hope you realize the truth before it's too late and you're standing before God's throne having to give an account of your life.
God bless
2007-01-16 21:57:30
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answer #3
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answered by ac28 5
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Of course, they wouldn't KNOW that they simply ceased to exist; they would have been unconcious and therefore unaware of any passage of time. So they would wake up thinking they'd arrived in heaven and they'd be really confused that it looked a lot like a laboratory from a sci-fi movie.
2007-01-16 21:52:44
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answer #4
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answered by Antique Silver Buttons 5
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Well if you knew anything about cell structure you would know that it's impossible to reanimate dead cells. Also when cell tissue is frozen it causes the cell innards to expand and burst the cell membrane. When you would thaw the tissue out it would turn into goo.
God Bless You
2007-01-16 21:50:30
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answer #5
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answered by Darktania 5
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Even if they could reanimate a person back to life, as Jesus resucitated Lazarus, God still gave man the genome to work with, and the person would still die, it would not be everlasting life.
2007-01-16 22:00:37
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answer #6
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answered by Lukusmcain// 7
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Why can't you wait?
Do you really think that that will change all of human nature? You must be joking.
Actually many who have been dead for a while that are revived are new believers after the experience.
Wouldnt G-d give us hard proof if He wanted us to have zero faith?
2007-01-16 21:52:57
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Wow, was I wrong!!! it was just total black nothingness! oh wait I must have been in your head my bad. Thank God I was reanimated.
2007-01-16 21:54:39
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answer #8
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answered by Patrick M 4
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That is a very faith based statment no?
"Faith is the evidence of things unseen"
Science is (with a capital S) almost a religion!
2007-01-16 21:56:15
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answer #9
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answered by JumpingJoy 2
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Stuff like that happened. Zero Cool told me
2007-01-16 21:51:38
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answer #10
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answered by FAUUFDDaa 5
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