Dr Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston is a neuroscientist at Monash University, Australia, where he investigates methods for characterising the nature of conscious experiences. In 2019, he obtained his PhD from The University of Melbourne, where he researched how genetic and environmental factors affect cognition. His research interests range from the decline, preservation and rescue of cognitive function at different stages of the lifespan, through to comparing different people's conscious experience of colour. By contributing to research that clarifies the neurobiological, cognitive, and philosophical basis of what it is to be a person, he hopes to accelerate the development of medical infrastructure that will help prevent him and everyone else from dying.
What is death? The Future Loves You challenges you, with fascinating real-life examples and entertaining thought experiments, to think more deeply about what death means on a neurological, philosophical, ethical and deeply personal level. It always surprises me that ‘death is bad’ can be such a controversial statement, and this book is a fantastic antidote to flippant fatalism. It’s also a scientific manifesto for how we could use future biomedical technology to overcome death—and how the future that loves you could be nearer than you think ... this book will change the way you think about death—and hopefully raise these important questions in wider society, too -- Andrew Steele, author of Ageless With this highly readable and informative book, Zeleznikow-Johnston provides a valuable addition to the general-audience literature on medical research to extend life. Leveraging his neuroscience background, he eloquently describes and promotes the novel and rapidly-advancing concept of vitrifixation, while also expertly placing it in its societal and philosophical context -- Aubrey de Grey, longevity pioneer Dear future, we love you too. This book elegantly handles the why and how of ending death, with engagingly described specific details and compelling responses to standard concerns about overpopulation, social stagnation, and unnaturalness. This thorough dive into the ""why"" truly primes us for the ""how"", which also delivers the goods -- Professor George Church, Harvard Medical School & MIT In an era of unrivaled change we must heed dangers and warnings, but not be gloomists. Millions have striven – and still strive – for a better life, for all. So … why not more life, as well? Every yin comes with yang, but this appeal for love-driven life extension adds plenty of fact and passion to the fiction -- David Brin, author of The Postman and Existence Everything that makes you mentally unique is encoded in the structural and molecular details of your brain’s connectome. To map animal connectomes, neuroscientists have developed incredibly effective preservation methods. The emerging science of brain preservation seeks to adapt these methods to preserve human brains for centuries-long storage. This brilliantly written book provides the first comprehensive overview of what brain preservation is, how it could be used to stop people from dying, and how it could be made to work verifiably and at scale. As a neuroscientist who has been working in this field for decades, I am delighted that Zeleznikow-Johnston has produced a work that is scientifically rigorous while being simultaneously extremely accessible for all readers, whatever their background -- Dr Ken Hayworth, Senior Scientist at Howard Hughes Medical Institute