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Religious morality? Any opinions?
P.S. I'm not some freak who desires immortality...just asking about your opinions

2007-11-26 23:51:54 · 2 answers · asked by Rostrum 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

2 answers

It is an interesting prospect, but present technology is most likely insufficient to make it practical. As Betty so correctly pointed out, freezing as it is done now destroys human tissue. However, as science progresses, it may be possible to "freeze" human flesh in such a way as to avoid the tissue damage. There is a certain amount of trial and error involved, so even though the people frozen now may never again live, their failures may point the way for those who come later.
As a Christian, I would not want to be frozen. I know what lies beyond death's door and do not fear it.
But I also can foresee applications for freezing as a means to travel between star systems. And if we do learn to safely freeze and then restore people who are dying, would that really be all that different than stopping a patient's heart long enough to do a repair or transplant it?
God gave us a mind and intelligence so that we could grow and expand and enjoy the universe that He made.

2007-11-29 02:49:26 · answer #1 · answered by sparc77 7 · 0 0

Oh you mean freezing dead people In hopes there will be a cure for their disease and they can be brought back to life. It's silly. Freezing human flesh destroys tissue. Trust me they will never be brought back to life. As far as religious morality I'm an Atheist I wouldn't know. But I would think a Christian wouldn't want to be brought back to life.

2007-11-27 08:02:41 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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