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#27 The mind-blowing science to bring you back from death - neuroscientist Ariel Zeleznikow‑Johnston

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Manage episode 491934071 series 3652205
Content provided by Peter Ottsjö. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Ottsjö or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

When is someone really dead? What does it mean to survive? Is mind-uploading really a possible future way of surviving? These are some of the questions we are discussing with Dr Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston.


Dr Ariel Zeleznikow‑Johnston is a neuroscientist and Research Fellow at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, whose work delves into the neural basis of consciousness - from understanding how genetics and environment shape cognition to exploring the subtle qualities of perceptual experience such as color qualia. A 2019 PhD graduate from The University of Melbourne, he has published extensively on how cognitive function changes across the lifespan.

He is the author of The Future Loves You: How and Why We Should Abolish Death, which advocates for brain preservation technology as a means to suspend death and revive individuals in the future.

Check out Peter's review of the book here: https://reachlevity.com/p/a-clear-case-for-cryonics-a-review-of-the-future-loves-you


His multidisciplinary approach combines rigorous neuroscience with philosophy and ethics, positioning him at the forefront of contemporary debates about identity, mortality, and the future of human life.


🔍 In this conversation:

✅ When do we consider someone to be dead?

✅ What is vitrifixation?

✅ Cryonics.

✅ Palliative philosophy.

✅ Personal identity and the connectome.

✅ Are neurons the same over time?

✅ Teleportation as a test of the information view of personhood.

✅ How do we make the future love us?

✅ Survival and medical priorities.


🚀 Special offer for our LEVITY audience: Join Vitalism today and receive a 30% discount on your membership using the code LEVITY at checkout. https://www.vitalism.io/membership


🚀 Show notes for this episode will be available soon after this airs. Sign up for the LEVITY newsletter to get them straight to your inbox: reachlevity.com


🚀 LEVITY is co-hosted by Patrick Linden, philosopher and author, and Peter Ottsjö, journalist and author.


CHAPTER

00:00 Intro

03:45 Jonathan is 190-years-old

07:00 Learned helplessness

10:00 Incoherent medical strategies

11:30 Aging is unhealthy

14:22 Palliative philosophy

20:44 The book in brief - how to cheat death

23:30 Different ways of biostasis - vitrifixation

35:01 Digital snap-shot emulation of our essense

37:59 What is a person? Connectome preservation

43:30 Do neurons stay the same over a life?

47:00 Is mind-uploading preserving personal identity?

01:03:52 We are not our brain - is the connectome model a dualist view?

01:07:50 Teleportation and survival I

01:14:19 Duplicate myself to increase utility

01:15:31 Teleportation and survival II

01:24:30 "Dead people" may not be dead

01:33:30 Saving lives by biostasis brainpreservation

01:36:04 Priority of medicine

01:38:05 Saving everyone that can be saved

01:40:07 Justice and survival - an unusual angle

01:43:36 What kind of world will we wake up to?

01:44:48 How to make the future love us

01:44:59 What are the odds of today's cryonics working?

01:49:10 What year is resurrection?

01:56:33 Ariel's book recommendations


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

28 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 491934071 series 3652205
Content provided by Peter Ottsjö. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Ottsjö or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

When is someone really dead? What does it mean to survive? Is mind-uploading really a possible future way of surviving? These are some of the questions we are discussing with Dr Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston.


Dr Ariel Zeleznikow‑Johnston is a neuroscientist and Research Fellow at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, whose work delves into the neural basis of consciousness - from understanding how genetics and environment shape cognition to exploring the subtle qualities of perceptual experience such as color qualia. A 2019 PhD graduate from The University of Melbourne, he has published extensively on how cognitive function changes across the lifespan.

He is the author of The Future Loves You: How and Why We Should Abolish Death, which advocates for brain preservation technology as a means to suspend death and revive individuals in the future.

Check out Peter's review of the book here: https://reachlevity.com/p/a-clear-case-for-cryonics-a-review-of-the-future-loves-you


His multidisciplinary approach combines rigorous neuroscience with philosophy and ethics, positioning him at the forefront of contemporary debates about identity, mortality, and the future of human life.


🔍 In this conversation:

✅ When do we consider someone to be dead?

✅ What is vitrifixation?

✅ Cryonics.

✅ Palliative philosophy.

✅ Personal identity and the connectome.

✅ Are neurons the same over time?

✅ Teleportation as a test of the information view of personhood.

✅ How do we make the future love us?

✅ Survival and medical priorities.


🚀 Special offer for our LEVITY audience: Join Vitalism today and receive a 30% discount on your membership using the code LEVITY at checkout. https://www.vitalism.io/membership


🚀 Show notes for this episode will be available soon after this airs. Sign up for the LEVITY newsletter to get them straight to your inbox: reachlevity.com


🚀 LEVITY is co-hosted by Patrick Linden, philosopher and author, and Peter Ottsjö, journalist and author.


CHAPTER

00:00 Intro

03:45 Jonathan is 190-years-old

07:00 Learned helplessness

10:00 Incoherent medical strategies

11:30 Aging is unhealthy

14:22 Palliative philosophy

20:44 The book in brief - how to cheat death

23:30 Different ways of biostasis - vitrifixation

35:01 Digital snap-shot emulation of our essense

37:59 What is a person? Connectome preservation

43:30 Do neurons stay the same over a life?

47:00 Is mind-uploading preserving personal identity?

01:03:52 We are not our brain - is the connectome model a dualist view?

01:07:50 Teleportation and survival I

01:14:19 Duplicate myself to increase utility

01:15:31 Teleportation and survival II

01:24:30 "Dead people" may not be dead

01:33:30 Saving lives by biostasis brainpreservation

01:36:04 Priority of medicine

01:38:05 Saving everyone that can be saved

01:40:07 Justice and survival - an unusual angle

01:43:36 What kind of world will we wake up to?

01:44:48 How to make the future love us

01:44:59 What are the odds of today's cryonics working?

01:49:10 What year is resurrection?

01:56:33 Ariel's book recommendations


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

28 episodes

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