> I think this is a modern version of entombment with ideas of resurrection. We might think of it as similar to what the Egyptians thought.
> Cryogenic preservation works best with small organisms.
> This is in part because ice crystallization occurs at a lower ratio to body mass. Single cells, sperm, ovum or even fetuses at very early stages can be preserved. This low rate of differential crystallization reflect how the freezing occurs very quickly.
> If there is any way to make this scheme work it will require some field effect or something that is able to localize the thermal motion of every atom and molecule almost instantly at once and the thermal energy rapidly extracted.
Fluid flow stops being smoothly Laminar and starts to become chaotically turbulent when a system has a Reynolds number between 2300 and 4000, although you might get some non chaotic vortices if it is bigger than 30. When chaotic turbulence starts a very small change in initial conditions will result in a huge difference in outcome and that is exactly what we want to avoid because we want to be able to figure out what the brain was like before it was frozen.
We can find the approximate Reynolds number by using the formula LDV/N. L is the characteristic size we're interested in, we're interested in cells so L is about 10^-6 meter. D is the density of water, 10^3 kilograms/cubic meter. V is the velocity of the flow, during freezing it's probably less than 10^-3 meters per second but let's be conservative, I'll give you 3 orders of magnitude and call V 1 meter per second. N is the viscosity of water and at room temperature N is 0.001 newton-second/meter^2, it would be less than that when things get cold and even less when water is mixed with glycerol as it is in cryonics but let's be conservative again and ignore those factors. If you plug these numbers into the formula you get a Reynolds number of about 1. 1 is a lot less than 2300 so it looks like any mixing caused by freezing would probably be laminar not turbulent, so you can still deduce the position where things are were from the position of where things are now, you can figure out how the parts of the puzzle are supposed to fit together.
> These people in liquid nitrogen bottles are not much more than high-tech mummies that are completely dead.
Actually scientific and technological considerations are only number 4 on my list of reasons why I think cryonics might not work, my first three reasons are:
1) I might not get frozen quickly after I am declared legally dead.2) I might not be retained at liquid nitrogen temperatures until the age of Drexler style nanomachines arrives.3) Mr. Jupiter brain, or whoever's around at the time, might not think I'm worth reviving; I am realistic enough to know that my value to it will be almost zero, my hope is that it will not be exactly Zero. I do have one thing going for me, in the age of Nanotechnology everything could be put into one of two categories, impossible to obtain at any price, or dirt cheap, nothing will be expensive.
> The problem is not so much with preserving brain states, though that is a possible consideration, it is phase change.
> Phase changes occur in a way that breaks symmetry. In freezing there is a breaking of scale size for water in the solid form. Beyond a certain large scale crystals are disconnected.
> With ordinary temperature induced phase changes it would require some mechanism to localize atoms or molecules so the water in the body is in the same crystalline state. If you do not do that the cellular structures are torn up into mush.
> Unfreezing is also probably critical as well so the ice does not enter into different crystalline phases while thawing.
> These people in bottles of liquid nitrogen are simply dead.