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Discussion Boards => Off-Topic => Topic started by: dijonworks on April 02, 2010, 10:42:04 pm
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I want to live forever right here on the earth, i dont want to go to heaven
ive never been and i dont know whats up there
if the world was peaceful clean and one big happy family who would want to leave?
NOT ME! sounds good
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You were there before you were here and you will adapt in an instant when you get there.
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I don't want to die, either, Sweety. But I have no idea where I'm going. That's probably why I'm scared. That's probably why many people fall into faith.
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I don't remember anything before I came onto this earth and I won't remember anything after I'm gone! :angel11:
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Very deep forum topic over here. Interesting.
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I don't think I'd want to live forever.
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I wouldn't want to live forever, I feel like everything will lose its meaning. Even though I'm scared of dying as most people are, not knowing what will come after is also a bit exciting. I've never been religious, who knows where we'll go or maybe we won't go anywhere lol. Let's all live for the present and the not so far future! Live, laugh, love and just enjoy the life you have here! Everything that has a beginning has an end and the fact that we know that... makes us appreaciate life all the more :wave:
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I don't want to live forever. I'm curious about life after death but I don't want to find out for a long time.
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I want to live forever right here on the earth, i dont want to go to heaven
ive never been and i dont know whats up there
if the world was peaceful clean and one big happy family who would want to leave?
NOT ME! sounds good
Yes sometimes I think it be nice to live forever too, but the world isent always kind and nice yes the world here on earth can be a beautiful place but it can sometimes be downright awfull and stressful if you are not born in a life of privilege. also it wouldnt be so great to live forever if all your loved ones were not able to live forever with you. so I assume you want everyone close to you to live forever too, and also imagine that a million years have gone by I dont know that life would still be as exiting after that much time has gone by, just saying, but I think your zest for life is wonderful and its refreshing to read that someone hasn't been beaten down by life. :peace: :)
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I don't want to live forever.
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You WILL continue to live, just in a different form. Then your essence will go into other living things. "A sea-change, into something rich and strange," Shakespeare called it. Don't be scared. We're all in the same boat.
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Well good news then, no one is going to heaven God's kingdom New Jerusalem is going to be right here in Zion which is in Jerusalem. The only one that wants to go to heaven is Satan but God says over and over agin in the bible that his kingdom will be UNDER the WHOLE HEAVEN and the EARTH will be his DOMAIN FOREVER. Wheather you like it or not your not going to heaven no one is or ever has been there.
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Now that I found my husband I find myself thinking that I don't want to grow old and I don't want to die. It annoys me. But then I told him about my not wanting to get old and he said "Well at least we're doing it together."
Other then love, my only other reason for wanting to live longer is to finally get a hoovercar (I mean it's 2010 for crying out loud!), and seeing where they take the ipod. That thing can only get so small and so thin.
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Living forever would be nice. I would take that option if it was given to me. I just do not want to get old.
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Living forever could be a great gift or the ultimate curse. :dontknow:
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That would be AWESOME! If I live forever, then I can enjoy all the yummy foods and not age. Cool! 8)
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You've got to realize, though, religiously or not, the world will be destroyed one day along the line. So what will you do when you're the last one around floating around in space with nothing to do and nowhere to go?
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I want to live forever right here on the earth, i dont want to go to heaven
ive never been and i dont know whats up there
if the world was peaceful clean and one big happy family who would want to leave?
NOT ME! sounds good
Best things going to make your wish come true...
Human Cryogenics Comes Closer to Reality with “Glassy Water”
By The Daily Reckoning • November 1st, 2007 • Related Articles • Filed Under
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Human Cryogenics Comes Closer to Reality with "Glassy Water"9.7109
Science has long been drawn to the idea of human cryogenics - preserving a human by freezing him in such a way that he can be thawed out later, good as new.
Both scientists and science fiction authors have long mulled the possibilities associated with freezing a person, leaving them in a kind of suspended animation for a long time, and then unfreezing them back to life.
Already, companies are offering human cryogenic services whereby you can freeze your whole body or (for the budget conscious) just the head until some future time.
The theory is that, eventually, whatever ails you — be it illness or simply the decrepitude of aging — will be curable. At that time, the custodians of your body will be directed to thaw it out.
You may be wondering why someone would freeze just their head. After all, one's quality-of-life would be somewhat restricted without the torso. The theory is that recent accomplishments in re-growing body parts of mice (salamanders naturally do it) will someday be extended to people.
Why freeze a damaged or aged body when you can wake up to a brand-new perfect one? Apart from recent successes with the cloning of body parts, proponents of nanotechnology argue that within 20 years or so it will be possible to design microscopic machines that scour your body for defects. When these "nano bots" find such defects, they will instantly correct them, thereby restoring your physiology to that of a vital 20-year-old.
In addition to the potential medical benefits, those who believe that we can never surpass the speed of light believe that human cryogenics suspension may hold the answer to deep space travel.
Under this scenario, a team of explorers or even a group of colonists would be frozen early in their journey from Earth. Upon arrival in the destination star system, the ship's computer systems and robotics with thaw out the people, ready for their new life.
From an investment standpoint, I'm far more interested in the medical applications of human cryogenics than the space travel ones. They are, pardon the pun, a lot closer to hand.
So, what does the new research say to us about this possibility? ScienceDaily reports that recent findings at the University of Helsinki support the possibility of cryopreservation without formation of ice crystals. If true, this would be a crucial development in human cryogenics because it's formation of the ice crystals that ruptures delicate cell membranes.
Surprisingly, the report declares that water is "still one of the least understood of all liquids despite a century of intensive study." Dr. Anatoli Bogdan of University of Helsinki has focused his research upon an exotic form of water called "glassy water."
Published in the ACS Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Dr. Bogdan's research found that by slowly super cooling glassy water it could be reduced to cryonic temperatures without formation of ice crystals.
Dr. Bogdan commented, "It may seem fantastic, but the fact that in aqueous solution, [the] water component can be slowly supercooled to the glassy state and warmed back without the crystallization implies that, in principle, if the suitable cyroprotectant is created, cells in plants and living matter could withstand a large supercooling and survive."
Even though I'm a technology optimist, I don't expect to see commercial human cryogenic applications of this new technology in the next one or two years. First, the work needs to be translated into lower organisms such as mice. If they can be supercooled and restored, it will make front-page headlines.
Even after successful test with mice, human tests would require FDA protocols and would take years to identify test subjects and run the experiment. One delaying factor would be the nature of the technology itself: Since it can only be ethically applied to people who have terminal disease, they cannot be thawed out until the disease has been cured.
Bottom line: I expect human cryogenics to have great significance in about 10 to 15 years. Meanwhile, I'll be watching for the law of unintended consequences to kick in — some bright researcher may come up with a shorter-term animal-based application that has big dollar signs associated with it.
Jonathan Kolber
for The Daily Reckoning Australia
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I don't want to live forever. If I lived forever I would get extremely bored and if only some of my friends and family lived forever, I would have to go through the heartache of losing them over and over again.
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I enjoy all of the comments
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Good thought!but what's the point of living forever if other beloved ones are gone? Life is hard and short but as long as everyone enjoys the quality of life we don't have to worry about the quantity any more
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I wouldn't want to live forever unless I could have my boyfriend live forever with me. I don't want to live on and jut keep having everyone I care about die.
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I wanna live forever so then id be able to live for the zombie apocalypse! WHOOHOO!