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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.
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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.
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