Cryonics is a popular topic among the rationalist community but not the utilitarian community. My impression is that most people who promote Cryonics are generally not utilitarians and most utilitarians do not promote Cryonics.
This seems to be one area where the rationalist and EA communities diverge significantly. My take is that typically those excited in Cryonics are typically in it for somewhat selfish (not in a bad way, just different from utilitarian) reasons, and that there haven't been many attempts to justify it as utilitarian because that wasn't the original intention.
I can imagine some interesting arguments for Cryonics as an effective intervention, but I haven't heard many others give these arguments, and I'm reluctant to steel man a cause for a reason its believers don't care about.
I wanted to open this up for the discussion. I would hope we can roughly come to a consensus on which of the following is true:
1) There is a strong case for cryonics being an effective monetary intervention, and the math has been done to support this.
2) Cryonics can be an effective career intervention for someone with a large amount of career capital in the field, but not for others.
3) There is very little case for cryonics as an effective utilitarian intervention, though it could make sense for other philosophical systems or people with moral uncertainty.
Other questions:
1) If there is no Hedonistic Utilitarian case for Cryonics, are there any strong Effective Altruist cases for it?
2) How much of the above applies to life extension research?
I've been musing about a Suspension for Historically Significant Minds movement. I don't particularly care whether I personally get suspended, I don't think I'm important, we can only save so many of these living biographies, others are more important, I think it's a tragedy that the most interesting biographies are currently being burned.
I'm not sure it's reasonable to expect a fund like this to be able to act very often, though! The figures who wont pay for their own suspension usually aren't going to be willing to accept suspension.
The people I'd want to nominate would tend to have a deep attachment to some community of the present, they would rarely think of the far future. Most of them, on receiving their invitation would think about it for 20 minutes and then trash it, out of a sense of humility, and out of a sense that accepting such a thing would look from the outside like an abandonment of their community. I would want to say to them, "No, you were selected because you are the largest portion of that community that we're able to save." I'm not sure whether they'd hear it.
Maybe it would help to give them additional nominations to allocate to others, so it wouldn't just be them. A lot of them wouldn't want to deal with the political consequences of having to make a decision like that. It would just make things messier. The dirty work of triage.