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  1. britannica.com

    Cryonics is the practice of freezing an individual who has died, with the object of reviving the individual sometime in the future. The process is initiated shortly after death, the body being packed in ice and shipped to a cryonics facility. Some individuals choose to have their entire bodies frozen, whereas others want only their heads preserved.
  2. scientificorigin.com

    Oct 23, 2024Cryonics is often associated with science fiction, but it is a real practice, albeit controversial. It is based on the idea that biological death, as we currently define it, might not be the end of life but rather a condition from which people could potentially be revived.Although no one has yet been successfully revived from cryonic preservation, cryonicists believe that the advances in ...
  3. science.howstuffworks.com

    ­Cryonics is the practice of preserving human bodies in extremely cold temperatures with the hope of reviving them sometime in the future. The idea is that, if some­one has "died" from a disease that is incurable today, he or she can be "frozen" and then revived in the future when a cure has been discovered.
  4. science.howstuffworks.com

    ­The science behind the idea does exist. It's called cryogenics-- the study of what happens to materials at really low temperatures.Cryonics-- the technique used to stor­e human bodies at extremely low temperatures with the hope of one day reviving them -- is being performed today, but the technology is still in its infancy.. In this article, we'll look at the practice of cryonics, learn how ...
  5. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

    Many critics assert that cryonics is not science and has no capability of becoming science until a mammal has been re-warmed and reanimated after having been cryopreserved at cryogenic temperatures. However, as demonstrated through scientific history, model building based on extrapolations from indirect evidence is central to science.
  6. science.howstuffworks.com

    The word "cryonics" is derived from the Greek term for "cold." Advertisement. By the late 1970s, there were about six cryonics companies in the United States. ... "Life on Ice." Science World, Volume 59, January 10, 2003. Verducci, Tom. "What Really Happened to Ted Williams." Sports Illustrated, August 18, 2003, pg. 66. What is Cryonics? Alcor ...
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