Policing Hybridity: Cryonic Suspension at the "Nexus" of Religion and Technoscience

Cryonic suspension ("cryonics") is the practice of freezing the deceased in hopes that scientists will eventually develop the levels of technology required to facilitate their revival and rejuvenation. By tracing the practice's ties to transhumanism, this article advances an interpret...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shoffstall, Grant W. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: University of Californiarnia Press 2021
In: Nova religio
Year: 2021, Volume: 25, Issue: 2, Pages: 87-113
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Ettinger, Robert C. W. 1918-2011, The Prospect of Immortality / Cryopreservation / Transhumanism / Quasi-religion / Pseudo-science / Vermischung
RelBib Classification:AZ New religious movements
NCH Medical ethics
Further subjects:B cryonic suspension
B Transhumanism
B myth of disenchantment
B religion science hybridiyt
B Cult
B Pseudoscience
B Cryonics
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Description
Summary:Cryonic suspension ("cryonics") is the practice of freezing the deceased in hopes that scientists will eventually develop the levels of technology required to facilitate their revival and rejuvenation. By tracing the practice's ties to transhumanism, this article advances an interpretation of cryonics as a hybrid of religion and technoscience. Scholars have converged on transhumanism's hybridity; it evinces a transposition of religious themes, e.g., redemption, transcendence, and immortality, into the this-worldly register of technoscience. This hybridity, however, is thoroughly transgressive - it destabilizes the presumptive boundary between "science" and "religion" as purified categories. The practitioners of cryonics inherited this hybridity and, through the act of freezing the deceased, render it concrete. Cryonics destabilizes culturally legitimated definitions of life and death, living and dead, and furthermore comes into conflict with otherwise accepted scientific truths and authorized forms of religiosity. This is all borne out by the fact that cryonics has a tendency to be dually designated, i.e., policed, as both "cult" and "pseudoscience."
ISSN:1541-8480
Contains:Enthalten in: Nova religio
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1525/nr.2021.25.2.87