A tour of Alcor Life Extension Foundation’s headquarters in Scottsdale, Arizona, includes some unique sights. The nonprofit has more than 200 human bodies or heads—and a few beloved pets—in cryogenic ...
An unusual number of “cryonicists” showed up to witness and photograph the decapitation of Ted Williams‘ body, according to a soon-to-be published book blasting the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, ...
The science of extending human life is rapidly accelerating, fueled by advances in artificial intelligence, genomics and regenerative medicine. What once belonged to the realm of science fiction now ...
About two weeks after his father died, Kurt Pilgeram opened an unexpected package. It contained his father’s cremated remains—minus the head. Pilgeram’s father, scientist Laurence Pilgeram, collapsed ...
Cryonics companies cryogenically freeze people after death, hoping they will one day be revived. Critics say it is fantastical. Proponents say the possibility is better than accepting death. The idea ...
We’ve spent the last year in the laboratory putting Phoenix under the microscope to reveal hundreds of specimens of the best culture, outdoor adventures, shopping, dining, and nightlife the city has ...
GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Laurence Pilgeram agreed to pay a company $120,000 to preserve his body indefinitely at a temperature of minus 196 degrees Celsius, in hope that some future technology would one ...
Inside a Scottsdale office building are the heads and bodies of 168 people who have been "cryonically preserved" with the hope that death will not be permanent. One of the most famous occupants at the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results