Half a century ago, most scientists deemed space travel unfeasible, and some contended that the sound barrier would never be broken. Many doctors, forty years ago, considered heart transplants scientifically impossible. Who, even thirty years ago, could have imagined today’s laptop computers, omnipresent cellular phone systems, or the Internet? We have already seen instances of human beings restored to life after up to an hour’s immersion in sub-32°F water, humans who were deceased by any clinical definition. Small organisms have routinely been frozen and revived. It seems naïve to insist that cryonics cannot work simply because no scientific process yet exists to revive deep-frozen adult mammals. By the time medical science possesses the technology to repair freezing damage, we will most likely know how to reverse aging as well, and thus no longer need the stopgap of cryonics.
Just as simple microchips can now store thousands of pages of text, isn’t it imaginable—even likely—that within the next few centuries we will learn to repair damaged cell structures molecule by molecule, either through nanotechnology or some other scientific discipline from an infinite array of possibilities?
In case the hopeful ice is an option you would consider for yourself and those you love, the following sections offer resources and advice which, of course, you should accept or reject as your own common sense dictates.
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND RECOMMENDED READING
The Prospect of Immortality, by Robert C. W. Ettinger. Published by Doubleday in the early 1960s, this is the book that started it all. Although the time frame has not progressed as rapidly as predicted, the concepts are presented with accessibility, humor, and great intelligence. (Note: Hard to find, but generally available from Alcor and the Cryonics Institute, both listed below. Also recommended for adventurous readers, Ettinger’s sequel: Man into Superman.)
Engines of Creation, by Eric Drexler. An amazing book on nanotechnology. Clear, concise, easy to understand, I consider Engines of Creation one of the best books ever written on any field of science. Trade paperback published by Anchor Books, 1987.
The Demon-Haunted World, by Carl Sagan. A very readable and logical treatise on critical thinking and the differences between science and superstition. Trade paperback published by Ballantine, 1997.
Virus of the Mind, by Richard Brodie. An accessible and entertaining book about memetics, the theory that attempts to explain how people become enslaved by advertising, religion, cults, mysticism, and other “memes.” Integral Press, 1996.
Nanomedicine, by Robert A. Freitas, Jr. An impressively detailed scientific analysis of some of the medical possibilities of nanotechnology. The first of three volumes is slated to be published by Landes Bioscience in early 1999. For more information, visit www.nanomedicine.com or www.foresight.org/Nanomedicine/index.html
CryoNet: A free electronic forum on cryonics. To subscribe, send an e-mail to: [email protected] with the following message in the body (not the subject line) of your e-mail: “subscribe cryonet”
Cryonics, Alcor’s excellent quarterly magazine. Subscriptions, $15 per year U.S., $20 Canada and Mexico, $25 overseas. Subscribers might also wish to receive The Alcor Phoenix, which comes out eight times per year, for an additional $20 U.S., $25 all other countries. Alcor, 7895 E. Acoma Dr., Suite 110, Scottsdale, AZ 85260
www.extropy.org, Web site of the Extropy Institute, a nonprofit organization that delves into advanced and future technologies and their uses in overcoming human limits.
sci.cryonics: The cryonics newsgroup on Usenet.
www.alcor.org: Alcor’s Web site, with links to many other cryonics and nanotechnology sites on the World Wide Web.
www.foresight.org: The Web site of the Foresight Institute (P.O. Box 61058, Palo Alto, CA 94306) offers the latest opportunities to learn more about the field of nanotechnology. e-mail: [email protected]
www.firstimmortal.com: Explore The First Immortal Web site and post your comments on the discussion forum. I visit this site myself from time to time and respond to many of the messages.
Life Extension Foundation, PO. Box 229120, Hollywood, Florida 33022-9120, telephone 800-544-4440. Publishes Life Extension magazine, offering up-to-date information and exceptionally low prices on high-quality nutritional supplements, vitamins, and other alternative medicines and books. Subscriptions $40 per annum, full membership $75. Web site: www.lef.org
CRYONICS ORGANIZATIONS
The following six facilities all appear to be operated by reputable, competent, and conscientious individuals. I hasten to add that these organizations are not structured to attract customers but to facilitate freezing for the fully informed. They lose money on every “patient” they sign up, and, like universities, must depend on donations to make up the difference. Furthermore, most principals of such facilities could earn higher incomes in other fields; they’re not in cryonics for the money. They will gladly supply information and answer your questions, but unlike most “sales organizations,” they won’t court your participation. Do not expect hand-holding: You must pursue them, and not the reverse.
Alcor Life Extension Foundation Nonprofit, tax exempt. The largest cryonics facility in the world. Founded 1972. Current rates: $120,000 whole body or $50,000 neurosuspension. May be funded with a life-insurance policy. (See “quickquote” listing below.) 7895 E. Acoma Dr., Suite 110, Scottsdale AZ 85260-6916 Phone (602) 922-9013 or (800) 367-2228. FAX (602) 992-9027. e-mail: info@alcocorg for general requests. Web site: http://www.alcor.org
American Cryonics Society P.O. Box 1509, Cupertino, CA 95105. For information on joining, and on services they provide, telephone (415) 254-2001, (800) 523-2001 or e-mail: [email protected] Web site: http://home.earth-link.net/~cryonics
Cyrocare Nonprofit, hires some for-profit companies to perform suspensions and storage. Not tax exempt. Current rates, under most circumstances: $125,000 full body; $58,500 neuro. May be funded with life insurance. For more information, call toll-free 1-800-TOP-CARE (1-800-867-2273). For inquiries via U.S. mail: CyroCare Foundation, Suite 3410 Northeast Hercules Plaza, 1313 N. Market St., Wilmington, DE 19801-1151. e-mail: [email protected] Web site: http://www.cryocare.org/cryocare/
Cyronics Institute Nonprofit. Incorporated 1976. Probably your best bet if your finances are limited. Current suspension fee: only $28,000 whole body. May be funded with life insurance. Address: 24355 Sorrentino Court, Clinton Township, MI 48035. Telephone (810) 791-5961, phone/fax (810) 792-7062. e-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
International Cryonics Foundation 1430 North El Dorado St., Stockton, CA 95202. For information, write or telephone (800) 524-4456 or (209) 463-0429.
Trans Time, Inc. (for-profit) Address: 3029 Teagarden St., San Leandro, CA 94577. For more information, telephone (510) 297-5577 or go to http://www.transtime.com
Often it is most frugal to purchase a separate, single-purpose life insurance policy, naming your cryonics organization as beneficial owner. If you are on the Internet, you can obtain competitive quotes from numerous competing companies through Quickquote, at: http://www.quickquote.com For example: A forty-four-year-old male nonsmoker in good health can purchase a $125,000 term policy for as little as $277.50 per year, although most cryonicists prefer to buy a whole-life policy, which is more expensive upfront, but often more economical over time.
Signing up for cryonics involves a complex and highly proactive process but is not that difficult once the choice is made. Humans are barnacled with traditions; rigged with a genetic propensity to accept and succumb to cultural norms, one of which is that whatever has been inevitable is ever thus. Furthermore, our instinctive fears cause most people to avoid dwelling upon death or any of its aspects, while dealing with a cryonics organization’s paperwork—obtaining all the necessary signatures, obscure information, and documentation—requires just that. Hence the tendency to procrastinate.
Call two or more cryonics organizations and request their information packets. When they arrive, read them. Make this important decision in a careful and t
imely manner, as detached from emotion as possible, and if you decide in favor of cryonics, grit your teeth and see the process through.
Every day you survive increases your odds of a hyperextended life. Cryonic preservation techniques will no doubt continue to improve, so the longer you live before being frozen (assuming your mind and memory remain sound), the more likely your revival with identity intact. Thus, the importance of maintaining your health takes on a new dimension.
Finally, the spread of information, even in the face of the uninformed ridicule that inevitably accompanies any attempt to shift societal attitudes, is a key to fruitful change. If you enjoyed The First Immortal, or found its ideas stimulating, try to get every person you care about to read it, too. Then you can discuss it with them from common ground. They might even thank you a century or more from now. In our unbounded future, anything is possible.
Best wishes and long life,
Jim Halperin
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THE FIRST IMMORTAL
by James L. Halperin
Visit us at www.randomhouse.com/features/firstimmortal/ to talk with the author, cast your vote in a cryonics opinion poll, get future news updates, and much more!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
James L. Halperin is the author of The Truth Machine. Born and raised in Massachusetts, he attended Harvard, and now lives in Dallas, Texas, with his wife and two young sons. He also co-owns the world’s largest rare coin company. All of his royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to health- and education-related charities.
Praise
“An entertaining read… intriguing… Keeps the reader riveted… Halperin’s characters are multidimensional, and he excellently sets up their emotional conflict and psychological motivations.… A real page turner, and a most recommended read.”
—The California Aggie
“Fascinating and often has the ring of genuine prediction. As in Halperin’s first novel, The Truth Machine, the technology is always front and center, but this is ultimately a story of people and the political and sociological implications of near immortality.”
—www.amazon.com
“True science fiction projects logical extensions of what mankind already knows scientifically. A shining example is The First Immortal… Layman readers can follow the scientific terminology and complex story lines without the hocus-pocus that often beclouds science fiction.”
—United Press International
“The first novel to capture in realistic fashion the inexorable march of spirit and technology that will almost certainly transform us in the twenty-first century from mortals to immortals.”
—Life Extension
“Halperin’s future is so detailed and plausible that you find yourself expecting to wake to it the next day.”
—Ernest Lilly, SF Revu
“Halperin zeroes in on issues that could make a big difference in how we and our children live in the next century. His novels combine the immediacy of realistic fiction with the verve and boldness of science fiction. Here is a writer for any reader who likes to explore big ideas.”
—David Brin
By James L. Halperin
Published by Del Rey® Books:
THE TRUTH MACHINE
THE FIRST IMMORTAL
Books published by The Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity discounts on bulk purchases for premium, educational, fund-raising, and special sales use. For details, please call 1-800-733-3000.
Copyright
Sale of this book without a front cover may be unauthorized. If this book is coverless, it may have been reported to the publisher as “unsold or destroyed” and neither the author nor the publisher may have received payment for it.
A Del Rey® Book
Published by The Ballantine Publishing Group
Copyright © 1998 by James L. Halperin
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in slightly different form in hardcover in January 1998.
www.randomhouse.com/delrey/
Visit Del Rey’s Web site for The First Immortal: www.firstimmortal.com
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 98-96406
ISBN 0-345-42182-5
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Hardcover Edition: January 1998
First Mass Market Edition: December 1998
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