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Msg | Description |
# 5783 | SCI.Trans Time Newsletter 2 [quaife] |
Simon argues that the economic and environmental
state of the world is increasingly improving, despite . . . and health improvements
take effect (p. 163). After this initial surge, the rate of
growth . . . reperfusion of thawed whole animals, neuronal
excitability, brain and organ histology and morphology.
We have . . . subsequent revival upon
maintaining them for two hours in a bath between -10 degrees C
(Tue, 20 Feb 1996, 15 KB) |
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# 16366 | A Prolix Reply [davidpascal] |
know (but prefer to forget), I already stated
at great length my concerns about CI . . . the Swingin'
Sixties? the Cro-Magnon Era?) stated his concerns. Charles: 'concerns'
are not 'proof'. . . . fog.
'Here's a test on the brains of two large mammals, and a licensed
. . . results seem to have
been gotten with brain slices, and with some rabbit kidneys taken . . . you 'possibly' did, and do so day after day, for years, I -
well, I wouldn' . . . Reich is of course
utterly despicable.<<
*Sigh*. After accusing CI of criminal negligence, screwing up . . . in patients' heads to see whether
their brains are swelling - CI doesn't drill holes . . . she was at 17 degrees at 0911 hours and 15 degrees at 0902
hours, say? (Mon, 28 May 2001, 36 KB) |
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# 8213 | Re: Storage of memory records [Steven B. Harris] |
also important to preserve along with
>the brain? I've got an electronic archive of . . . will make that mistake (at least not after you read this
article!)
We will discuss . . . you can get done in a "One-Hour" photo-store. They are generally
printed on . . . standard E-6 process (slides in an hour, though not all
"one hour" stores have it). These slide films represent . . . life of 110
years, but H. Wilhelm states that when their more rapid formation
of (15 May 1997 06:12:43, 28 KB) |
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# 23816 | Re: David Pizer [Unique Awareness Sensor Theory] [51aerv4rw001] |
somatic theory of personal
identity. This theory states that you are (or have survived as) . . . duplicate of one neuron in your
UAS. After it is completed, we excise the original . . . quite normal for a
small number of brain cells to kick the bucket every so . . . then what happens if we replace one brain
cell every day (or hour, or minute) until the whole UAS is (Mon, 5 Apr 2004, 7 KB) |
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# 28785 | News item - Japan - Missing man lies dormant 24 days [Chris Manning] |
Rokko in western Japan on October 7 after a barbecue with colleagues. Rather than joining . . . on Tuesday. "I must have fallen asleep after that."
When a passing climber found him . . . treated Mr Uchikoshi believe he lost consciousness after his fall and that his body's natural survival instincts kicked in, sending him into a state akin to hibernation as the temperature on . . . as 10 degrees.
"He fell into a state similar to hibernation and many of his organs slowed, but his brain was protected," Dr Shinichi Sato, head of the hospital's emergency unit, told reporters. "I believe his brain capacity has recovered 100 per cent."
Doctors . . . her heart had stopped beating for two hours and her temperature had dropped to 16 (Wed, 27 Dec 2006, 3 KB) |
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# 15436 | A Reply To Mr. Grimes [davidpascal] |
three separate film crews in succession TV after that. Hence things are
a trifle busy . . . freshly killed, cooled, perfused, and
evaluated sheep brains will yield similar results on humans. What . . . remove a tiny chunk of their members brains
(their cryopreserved members' brains) and see how stuff was going. To . . . well, you know where,
don't you)? After all, they're different -- probably; we don' . . . the "one pass" is. Ten minutes? Ten hours? Also you don't say
anything about . . . perfusion of a patient takes perhaps an hour and a half. I say rough
and . . . one of the scientists developing
vitrification, who stated flatly that the chemicals used are LESS (Tue, 23 Jan 2001, 38 KB) |
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# 14282 | Crippling Vitrification [davidpascal] |
postings ('99%' of which are 'busy with brain
masturbation'); of cryonicists ('short-sighted, head-in- . . . else. What do you learn about the
state of vitrification from it?
Is there a . . . itself induced additional unrecoverable damage,
and soon after abandoned the pressure approach. Has 21CM in fact done
any actual brain research at all? Wakfer: 21CM is not working with
brain slices. That it the research project of . . . procedure at least applicable
to the human brain, then? Wakfer: it does not measure all . . . measure intercellular functionality which is crucial
for brain tissue. 21CM is at least looking for . . . is there anyone likely to
do so after hearing such a string of abusive and . . . and courteous if
you lose the sale after all, nobody bats a thousand, and the . . . fall downstairs and lie there for
several hours or days before being reached by a (Wed, 9 Aug 2000, 25 KB) |
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# 9353 | Re: CryoNet #9350 [reviving the frozen] [Paul Wakfer] |
astounded to hear Lovelock's claim that after his
> unpatented invention (in the '50s? ' 40s?) . . . neurology was and how long they lasted after
> revival wasn't made clear, but Lovelock was explicit about their chilly
> temporary state - frozen hamsters, he said, were quite solid; you could
> knock them against the lab bench. After thawing, they'd run around.
The people . . . can actually withstand a percentage of their brain water
turned to ice (I forget how . . . 21CM
does deep hypothermia experiments on (5+ hours at 2-3'C) feel like that.
(Thu, 26 Mar 1998, 4 KB) |
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# 32630 | Hello everyone [Gerald Monroe] |
life.
I've become interested in cryonics after taking a human anatomy course.
The first . . . had labored on this man for many hours but ultimately
there he was on the . . . as sufficient damage was done to their brain tissue.
So I started thinking about the technical elements of it. If you froze
someone's brain, how would you rebuild it into a working state? You'd have
to have some kind (Tue, 15 Jun 2010, 11 KB) |
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# 27387 | Alcor News #45 22 Nov 2005 [Mike Perry] |
working to cryopreserve your intact
body and brain as perfectly as possible.
Progress is already . . . an advanced cryoprotectant capable of vitrifying the brain
for whole-body members, but parts of . . . We deployed
a full transport team, but after several days some of the
team was . . . Orleans. Both
cryopreservations were performed within 48 hours of one
another. Full details will be . . . us to restock our surgical supplies faster
after cryopreservation cases. [TJ]
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Dozens of Scientists Go . . . new form of organ
donation called Donation after Cardiac Death (DCD). One of
the authors . . . s "information
theoretic criterion" for death, and states flat-out that
almost no patients declared (Wed, 23 Nov 2005, 14 KB) |
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