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The Courts Science

Terminally Ill Teen Won Historic Ruling To Preserve Body (bbc.com) 386

A teenage girl has been cryogenically frozen in the hope of being revived at a time when her cancer might be cured. The terminally ill 14-year-old girl from London won a legal fight to be frozen after she died. After her death in October, the girl's remains were transported to a cryonic facility in the United States. From a report: The girl, who was terminally ill with a rare cancer, was supported by her mother in her wish to be cryogenically preserved -- but not by her father. She wrote to the judge explaining that she wanted "to live longer" and did not want "to be buried underground." A High Court judge ruled that the girl's mother should be allowed to decide what happened to the body. The details of her case have just been released. "I have been asked to explain why I want this unusual thing done. I am only 14 years old and I don't want to die but I know I am going to die. I think being cryopreserved gives me a chance to be cured and woken up -- even in hundreds of years' time. I want to live and live longer and I think that in the future they may find a cure for my cancer and wake me up. I want to have this chance. This is my wish," the girl wrote. The judge, Mr Justice Peter Jackson, visited the girl in hospital and said he was moved by "the valiant way in which she was facing her predicament." His ruling, he said, was not about the rights or wrongs of cryonics but about a dispute between parents over the disposal of their daughter's body.
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Terminally Ill Teen Won Historic Ruling To Preserve Body

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  • by Zaowulf ( 4331525 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @11:41AM (#53314335)
    Is there a Mr I C Wiener here?
  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @11:43AM (#53314355)
    They paid for it so why is this news? No different then a custody battle.
  • by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Friday November 18, 2016 @11:45AM (#53314375) Homepage
    Regardless of the girl's wishes or the scientific viability of cryo, it must be absolutely awful to have your parents arguing about what to do with your body after you die. Even worse knowing that one of them is against it, she must have some feeling that her father doesn't want to see her again.
    • by caseih ( 160668 )

      Always hard to see things objectively when so many emotions are involved. Both the mother and father will be dead long before any there's any chance of technology existing to have a hope of reviving a cryogenically-frozen body, so wanting to see their daughter again in their mortal lifespan is not realistic anyway for either of them.

      According to the BBC the father agreed to support his daughter's wish before she died. Apparently the money is being put up by the mother's family, so we can only speculate on

      • He very clearly stated his reasons in the full article: "Even if the treatment is successful and she is brought back to life in let's say 200 years, she may not find any relative and she might not remember things and she may be left in a desperate situation given that she is only 14 years old and will be in the United States of America".

        Mom & her family didn't think things through, while he did.
    • Her father is never going to see her again. Unless you think the scientists will both cure cancer and solve the unfreezing problems within the next couple decades.

    • by Desler ( 1608317 )

      Her father isn't going to ever see her again regardless.

      • by uncqual ( 836337 )

        Why can't he stop by the freezer and see her?

        • by s.petry ( 762400 )
          Delusional to believe that his daughter is what's in the freezer. It's a frozen body in the freezer, and a reminder of the daughter he lost.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Even worse knowing that one of them is against it, she must have some feeling that her father doesn't want to see her again.

      I think the six years without contact said that:

      The girls' parents were divorced and the girl had not had any contact with her father for six years before she became ill.

      Not sure what he was looking for, if it was malice towards the mother or the girl or getting paid off to let it go but I strongly doubt it was over any real concern about her well-being.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @11:48AM (#53314399)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Wish I could mod you up. This is dead on.

    • This is great. Now try the same thought experiment while pretending your soul isn't made of trash. Imagine you're a scientist hundreds of years in the future and you finally now have the incredibly valuable and rare opportunity to talk to a real live human from the ancient world, freshly awakened as though they'd been teleported directly from the past.

    • by Jamu ( 852752 )
      It's still better than the alternative.
    • by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:04PM (#53314589) Homepage

      Then you have the cultural change. Imagine being frozen in 1900 and waking up in 2016. The whole social order is different. You likely are deeply at odds with it culturally.

      I've often wondered this. If you could take a random person from different eras and plunk them into the present (even allowing for some sort of "techno-magic language translation"), how would they adjust? Obviously, the further back you go, the less able they would be able to cope. Someone from 1950 would stumble but might be generally fine. Someone from 1860 would have a lot of trouble. Someone from 1060 would likely run fleeing from all of the weird things they saw. What's the furthest back you could go and still have the person relatively well-integrated into society?

      • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:28PM (#53314815) Homepage Journal

        What's the furthest back you could go and still have the person relatively well-integrated into society?

        Judging by recent events, 50% of people aren't well suited to fit into society -- without displacing them in time %N years.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Someone from 1860 would have a lot of trouble.

        I think that depends a lot on the someone. Is it some poor slob plucked off the rail road tracks in the western US, or is it some highly educated(for the day) wealthy urbanite? Suppose we snapped Andrew Carnegie off the street in 1860, and dropped him off here in 2016. I think he would be surprised and upset by a number of things but would mostly be able to navigate.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        The question is, would they even be able to breathe, eat or drink without experiencing all sorts of health issues. Whether you increase or decrease the pollution, it will become a lot harder for your body to adjust a jump rather than a gradual increase. 100 years may not be that bad but it's more likely that it will be 200 or 500 years before someone can restore your body and your brain from the cell damage cryogenics does, people may have all sorts of evolutionary traits that deal with different CO, lead o

      • If you could take a random person from different eras and plunk them into the present (even allowing for some sort of "techno-magic language translation"), how would they adjust?

        HBO's Westworld is taking a hack at this, albeit with androids being subjected to the time-dissonance.

      • by mccalli ( 323026 )
        This has been done with South American tribes. There's a great documentary on it - a BBC reporter first lived with the tribe, then years later took some of them to London. I'm coming up short in finding the name of the documentary unfortunately, but the answer is - they coped amazingly well. Looking at tech they'd never seen before (trucks, a lift/elevator, cities) to being flown over - they coped amazingly well.

        One thing they didn't quite get was a sense of scale. The leader of the tribe was brought ove
      • I bet people like Leonardo da Vinci or Plato could easily deal with the change. I bet they would be lost in wonder for many years as they learned all of the new things, but still, being alive is being alive. The trappings change all the time but the main theme is still there.

        Sure, there are people who would collapse at the enormity of it all, but any of the real thinkers from the past would do just fine. Hell, they would likely make many new discoveries since they do not have all of the intellectual baggage

    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:13PM (#53314679) Homepage

      Then you have the cultural change. Imagine being frozen in 1900 and waking up in 2016. The whole social order is different. You likely are deeply at odds with it culturally. (...) So odds are you just wake up a social pariah, with no skills, in an alien social order with no friends and family. Heck, you might not even speak the lingua franca of that age.

      Consider the vast multitude of cultures today, she's probably no worse off than that odd foreign kid. For that matter, what you describe is not much different from what many refugees experience today. And 14 is young enough to get a perfectly normal education, job, find friends and start a family same as your peers. I'd take 70 more years of that over dying at 14 any day. Cryogenics is a fantasy, but I'd take the fantasy over reality any day of the week.

      • Cryogenics is a fantasy, but I'd take the fantasy over reality any day of the week.

        I agree. To make it a bit more clear for everyone else -

        The choices are:

        1) Dead. Period. End of story.
        2) Dead. Frozen with almost zero chance of you being revived in the future. Not guaranteed to be end of story.

        The choice is clearly easy to make. For someone like me who has lived the majority of their expected life, I would not freeze myself. I love being alive but I realize that at some point it should end so new ideas can enter the arena. For whatever reason, it appears that I can only change so much and

    • by Eloking ( 877834 )

      For the sake of argument, suppose this is possible.

      You will wake up about 5 generations beyond where you are now. Assuming her death doesn't end the bloodline altogether, the relatives she has in 100 years will have no real familial connection to her. Everyone and everything that defines her sense of happiness now will likely be dead and gone or so evolved that it is unrecognizable (like tech and hobbies).

      Then you have the cultural change. Imagine being frozen in 1900 and waking up in 2016. The whole social order is different. You likely are deeply at odds with it culturally.

      So odds are you just wake up a social pariah, with no skills, in an alien social order with no friends and family. Heck, you might not even speak the lingua franca of that age. For all we know, Mandarin could replace English by 2116.

      People imagine it like a movie where you wake up in a shiny, accepting utopia and you just go like Ender to the stars where no one knows your past or cares. The reality is probably more akin to you becoming a ward of the state for years, being looked down on except as a curiosity.

      Really, this is what you came up best as an argument again this?

      Better be death than waking in a completely different world?

      Not much different that a friend that cut all his family tie and have gone in a world trip adventure (he's now in China for the last 2-3 years). And he have never being happier.

      My point is, family, culture and language are a long, looonnnng shot to be absolute necessity for happiness. And if I had a grand-grand-grand great father about to wake up at my age, I'll be one of the first in

    • by Aaden42 ( 198257 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:22PM (#53314761) Homepage

      Honestly, it sounds like a pretty amazing adventure. Time travel, basically. Albeit low chance of actually arriving & zero chance of a return trip. If I'm dying anyways and have the disposable income, why not? I can always choose to kill myself again (permanently) if I find myself unable to adapt to the future. Other than having a wide variety of things I'd rather do with the money while I'm alive, I don't see a down side.

      I was born into a world I knew nothing about once & learned all I could to get where I am now. Granted, I'd lack the neuroplasticity of a child's brain for the second attempt, but I'd be willing to give it a try. Beats the alternative anyways.

    • by jdavidb ( 449077 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:24PM (#53314779) Homepage Journal
      Obviously the complete eradication of one's own existence is the best possible solution to those problems.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      I think for a lot people what you are saying is very true. She is however a teenager. At 14 years old she would probably be much more able to adapt to those realities than most of us adults would. She is still young enough to learn skills, etc. Is still at an age where she can readily make friends and from relationships.

      The real question is can they freeze here before she is technically deceased? I think this matters becuase its terms of being able to support herself in the future that could be critica

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:28PM (#53314819)

      You are assuming that she will be the ONLY one that is "woken up". But if she can be revived, so can all the others. So there will be a whole group of people that share the culture of the early 21st century. They can hang out together.

    • by nasor ( 690345 )
      I would make new friend and learn the new customs. There are some hobbies that have endured for thousands of years; sports, reading and writing for pleasure, boards games, arts like painting/sculpting/etc. The game Go is probably over 5000 years old. There are paintings of groups of people kicking a ball around in a way that looks an awful lot like playing soccer that are over 1000 years old. Painting and sculpting was occurring in prehistoric times. It seems exceedingly likely that these things will all s
    • by bazorg ( 911295 )

      Suppose it's possible, and she wakes up 100 years from now, aged 14. Takes 2 tablets and cancer is gone. Or has her mind uploaded to another body. Plenty of time to catch up on what's new in the 22nd century. Sooner than you know it, she'll star in 6D adult entertainment named something like "the 21st century tart-bot".

    • It depends on your personality type.

      An ISFP would probably be devastated by the loss of family members & friends.

      An INTP might barely notice, aside from occasional pangs of nostalgia around the holidays, because he'd be fascinated by the new kitchen appliances and the technology behind them.

      An ESTP would revel in his new celebrity status & go on the lecture circuit. Or self-destruct if nobody cared.

      An INFJ would get depressed about the privilege that allowed him -- but not countless others -- to liv

    • by dmomo ( 256005 )

      What about the body's flora and immune system? Today, we have to get all sorts of shots before visiting certain foreign countries. Could it be that the future version of one's own country would be just as foreign in terms of whatever pathogens are common? Could the newly-revived body be ill-equipped to face this?

      • Yes, the scientists that have spent decades developing and planning for the day that they can wake this girl up are going to totally forget about immunization. Imagine the big 'DOH' around the room when she dies immediately from a cold.
      • Or maybe the reverse. The kid might be swarming with stuff that people in the 31st century eradicated centuries ago and are no longer immune to.

      • by uncqual ( 836337 )

        Presumably by then, the immune system will be better understood and she would be given the treatment (such as vaccines whatever replaces them and/or returning the immune system to its "just born" state boosted with a starter of [fake] mom's immune system and/or) necessary to protect her before exposing her to the unfamiliar pathogens.

    • Reality will be somewhere in the middle of your two scenarios. Chances are the people who wake her up wouldn't just be ready to dump her on the street. It won't be done unless there is some sort of scientific program wrapped around it, following a long period of experimentation and development. These will be a certain group of people who are aliens, because she won't be the only one frozen, and they will almost certainly bond with one another having been through the same experience.
    • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @01:22PM (#53315363)

      You will wake up about 5 generations beyond where you are now. Assuming her death doesn't end the bloodline altogether, the relatives she has in 100 years will have no real familial connection to her. Everyone and everything that defines her sense of happiness now will likely be dead and gone or so evolved that it is unrecognizable (like tech and hobbies).

      Then you have the cultural change. Imagine being frozen in 1900 and waking up in 2016. The whole social order is different. You likely are deeply at odds with it culturally.

      So odds are you just wake up a social pariah, with no skills, in an alien social order with no friends and family. Heck, you might not even speak the lingua franca of that age. For all we know, Mandarin could replace English by 2116.

      What's bizarre here is that you think this is worse than death. I guess you're one of those believers in an afterlife that no one, including the powerful supernatural beings who supposedly manage the thing, has bothered to show exists.

    • Who cares? Being alive is better than being dead. No, that statement is nonsensical as there is nothing in death so it can't be compared to. As much as I have suffered, no matter how much I will suffer, I want to be alive. Worst case scenario I continue exploring the world from my own mind because my body is ineffective or in a prison... but I will continue exploring the world. THAT is life. Not friends, family, etc.

      Don't get me wrong, friends, family, and social stuff is very important... but without life,

    • So, just like almost any other immigrant over the centuries.
  • From the summary:

    His ruling, he said, was not about the rights or wrongs of cryonics but about a dispute between parents over the disposal of their daughter's body.

    Exactly. Even before I could reach the closing sentence of the summary, I was trying to figure out what this situation had to do with "science" or even cryonics. This was just a dispute between parents over a kid. Nothing to see here.

    • And the ruling is absurd... if one of the parents wanted to make handbags out of her skin, the judge would of ruled against them. The freezing thing is just as disturbing and silly.
      • by JesseMcDonald ( 536341 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:30PM (#53314837) Homepage

        And the ruling is absurd... if one of the parents wanted to make handbags out of her skin, the judge would of ruled against them.

        The decision was rightly the teen's, not the parents'. It's her body, after all. Provided the teen can come up with a way to pay for the procedure, that is—and in this case the mother was willing to serve as sponsor. No one else has any legitimate say in the matter.

        • It appears that the girls family is paying for it... I assumed that the father was getting saddled somehow with the cost. That's what I get for not RTFA.....
  • by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Friday November 18, 2016 @11:49AM (#53314411) Homepage Journal

    Imagine waking up in 400 years, surrounded by scientists and doctors all cheering at their breakthrough. "Is there still a WWW?", you ask. "Yes! Just think of what you want to visit and this holographic unit will bring it up in 3D for all of us to see." Smile then concentrate on goatse.
  • moon pie what a time to be alive

  • The father probably didn't want to pay for the yearly costs of keeping a dead corpse on ice in the pointless idea that it will be possible to revive a corpse in the near future. If the mom and daughter want to spend needlessly on this than by all means pony up the cash.

    I'm waiting for the breakthrough discovery of a special chemical that will prevent ice crystals from forming and allow for a better thaw that doesn't destroy cellular membranes. It'll be ironic when the cryonic scientific community goes an

    • The father probably didn't want to pay for the yearly costs of keeping a dead corpse on ice

      Nope. The mom's family had already agree to cover the cost. It would have cost Dad nothing either way.

      • How much does this cost?

        Regardless how much, I could think of plenty of better things to spend that money on. How about instead donating that money to finding a cure for this rare cancer, a scholarship fund, or saving the damn whales?

        Instead they decide to give it to a company that is offering nothing more than a refrigerated storage unit.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • "Tiny pieces of frozen head sprayed around the room."

      There's a sentence I didn't think I'd ever see in a non-fiction story.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • This has to be a new record for the time between when something showed up in my Facebook feed to the time when someone cross posted to Slashdot. Sad, sad day.

  • Doesn't it need to be done immediately? I would imagine that the body changes dramatically after death and I wouldn't think that those changes would be reversible.

  • by GrumpySteen ( 1250194 ) on Friday November 18, 2016 @12:42PM (#53314975)

    While I don't think there's any actual chance of her ever being revived and cured, I'd be willing to bet that the thought that there was a chance (however slim) helped the girl accept her situation and made her last days a lot less hellish than they might have otherwise been.

  • I'm imagining a high tech looking front room and lab with a hidden door that leads to a crematorium. You could do it for the bargain rate of $20k per pop (less than the $37k listed in the article) and it would, for all intents and purposes, be the same.

  • They did this with John Wayne too. He's not dead. He's frozen. He's gonna be pissed when they thaw him out.

  • And in a 120 years even if there was technology to revive the person why would they? What makes anyone that special? Especially after everyone who knew you was dead? There's very few people as a society that we'd even consider reviving anyway. Just get over it, we all die, and always will.

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