{"id":173848,"date":"2016-09-22T19:51:53","date_gmt":"2016-09-22T23:51:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/a-history-of-cryonics-ben-best\/"},"modified":"2016-09-22T19:51:53","modified_gmt":"2016-09-22T23:51:53","slug":"a-history-of-cryonics-ben-best","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/a-history-of-cryonics-ben-best\/","title":{"rendered":"A History of Cryonics &#8211; BEN BEST"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>by Ben Best  <\/p>\n<p>    Robert Ettinger is widely regarded as the \"father    of cryonics\" (although he often said that he would rather be    the grandson). Mr.Ettinger earned a Purple Heart in World    WarII as a result of injury to his leg by an artillery    shell. He subsequently became a college physics teacher after    earning two Master's Degrees from Wayne State University. (He    has often been erroneously called \"Doctor\" and \"Professor\".)    Robert Ettinger was cryopreserved at the Cryonics Institute in    July2011 at the age of92. See The    Cryonics Institute's 106th Patient  Robert Ettinger for    details.  <\/p>\n<p>    A lifelong science fiction buff, Ettinger conceived the idea of    cryonics upon reading a story called The Jameson Satellite in the July 1931    issue of Amazing Stories magazine. In 1948 Ettinger    published a short story having a cryonics theme titled The    Pentultimate Trump. In 1962 he self-published THE    PROSPECT OF IMMORTALITY, a non-fictional book explaining in    detail the methods and rationale for cryonics. He mailed the    book to 200 people listed in WHO'S WHO IN AMERICA. Also in    1962, Evan Cooper independently self-published IMMORTALITY:PHYSICALLY, SCIENTIFICALLY,    NOW, which is also a book advocating cryonics. In 1964    Isaac Asimov assured Doubleday that (although    socially undesirable, in his opinion) cryonics is based on    reasonable scientific assumptions. This allowed THE PROSPECT OF    IMMORTALITY to be printed and distributed by a major publisher.    The word \"cryonics\" had not been invented yet, but the concept    was clearly established.  <\/p>\n<p>    In December, 1963 Evan Cooper founded the world's first    cryonics organization, the Life Extension Society, intended to    create a network of cryonics groups throughout the world.    Cooper eventually became discouraged, however, and he dropped    his cryonics-promoting activities to pursue his interest in    sailing. His life was ended by being lost at sea. Cooper's    networking had not been in vain, however, because people who    had become acquainted through his efforts formed cryonics    organizations in northern and southern California as well as in    New York.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1965 a New York industrial designer named Karl Werner coined    the word \"cryonics\". That same year Saul    Kent, Curtis Henderson and Werner founded the Cryonics    Society of New York. Werner soon drifted away from cryonics and    became involved in Scientology, but Kent and Henderson remained    devoted to cryonics. In 1966 the Cryonics Society of Michigan    and the Cryonics Society of California were founded. Unlike the    other two organizations, the Cryonics Society of Michigan was    an educational and social group which had no intention to    actually cryopreserve people  and it exists today under the    name Immortalist Society.  <\/p>\n<p>    A TV repairman named Robert Nelson was the driving force behind    the Cryonics Society of California. On January12, 1967    Nelson froze a psychology professor named James Bedford. Bedford was injected with multiple    shots of DMSO, and a thumper was applied in an attempt to    circulate the DMSO with chest compressions. Nelson recounted    the story in his book WE FROZE THE FIRST MAN. Bedford's wife and son    took Bedford's body from Nelson after six days and the family kept Dr.Bedford in cryogenic care    until 1982 when he was transferred to Alcor. Of 17cryonics patients cryopreserved in    the period between 1967 and 1973, only Bedford remains in    liquid nitrogen.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1974 Curtis Henderson, who had been maintaining    three cryonics patients for the Cryonics Society of New York,    was told by the New York Department of Public Health that he    must close down his cryonics facility immediately or be fined    $1,000per day. The three cryonics patients were returned    to their families.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1979 an attorney for relatives of one of the Cryonics    Society of California patients led journalists to the    Chatsworth, California cemetery where they entered the vault    where the patients were being stored. None of the nine    \"cryonics patients\" were being maintained in liquid nitrogen,    and all were badly decomposed. Nelson and the funeral director    in charge were both sued. The funeral director could pay    (through his liability insurance), but Nelson had no money.    Nelson had taken most of the patients as charity cases or on a    \"pay-as-you-go\" basis where payments had not been continued.    The Chatsworth Disaster is the greatest    catastrophe in the history of cryonics.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1969 the Bay Area Cryonics Society(BACS) was    founded by two physicians, with the assistance of others,    notably Edgar Swank. BACS (which later changed its name to the    American Cryonics Society) is now the cryonics organization    with the longest continuous history in offering cryonics    services. In 1972 Trans Time was founded as a for-profit perfusion    service-provider for BACS. Both BACS and Alcor intended to    store patients in New York, but in 1974 Trans Time was forced    to create its own cryostorage facility due to the closure of    the storage facility in New York. Until the 1980s all BACS and    Alcor patients were stored in liquid nitrogen at Trans Time.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1977 Trans Time was contacted by a UCLA cardiothoracic    surgeon and medical researcher named Jerry    Leaf, who responded to an advertisement Trans Time had    placed in REASON magazine. In 1978 Leaf created a company    called Cryovita devoted to doing cryonics research and to    providing perfusion services for both Alcor and Trans Time.  <\/p>\n<p>    By the 1980s acrimony between Trans Time and BACS caused the    organizations to disassociate. BACS was renamed the American    Cryonics Society (ACS) in 1985. Jim Yount (who    joined BACS in 1972 and became a Governor two years later) and    Edgar Swank have been the principal activists in ACS into the    21st century.  <\/p>\n<p>    For 26 years  from the time of its inception until 1998  the    President of Trans Time was Art Quaife. The name \"Trans Time\" was inspired by    Trans World Airlines, which was then a very prominent airline.    Also active in Trans Time was Paul Segall, a man who had been an active member    of the Cryonics Society of New York. Segall obtained a PhD from    the University of California at Berkeley, studying the    life-extending effects of tryptophan deprivation. He wrote a    book on life extension (which included a section on cryonics)    entitled LIVING LONGER, GROWING YOUNGER. He founded    a BioTech company called BioTime, which sells blood replacement    products. In 2003 Segall deanimated due to an aortic    hemorrhage. He was straight-frozen because his Trans Time    associates didn't think he could be perfused. The only other    cryonics patients at Trans Time are two brains, which includes    the brain of Luna Wilson, the murdered teenage daughter of    Robert Anton Wilson. When Michael West (who is on the Alcor Scientific Advisory Board) became BioTime    CEO, the company shifted its emphasis to stem cells.  <\/p>\n<p>    Aside from Trans Time, the other four cryonics organizations in    the world which are storing human patients in liquid nitrogen    are the Alcor Life Extension Foundation (founded in    1972 by Fred and Linda Chamberlain), the Cryonics Institute (founded in 1976 by Robert    Ettinger), KrioRus (located near Moscow in Russia,    founded in 2006), and Oregon Cryonics (incorporated by former CI    Director Jordan Sparks, and beginning service in May 2014).  <\/p>\n<p>    Fred and Linda Chamberlain had been    extremely active in the Cryonics Society of California until    1971 when they became distrustful of Robert Nelson because of    (among other reasons) Nelson's refusal to allow them to see    where the organization's patients were being stored. In 1972    the Chamberlains founded Alcor, named after a star in the Big Dipper    used in ancient times as a test of visual acuity. Alcor's first    cryonics patient was Fred    Chamberlain's father who, in 1976, became the world's first    \"neuro\" (head-only) cryonics patient.    (Two-thirds of Alcor patients are currently \"neuros\"). Trans    Time provided cryostorage for Alcor until Alcor acquired its    own storage capability in 1982.  <\/p>\n<p>    After 1976 the Chamberlains encouraged others to run Alcor,    beginning with a Los Angeles physician, who became Alcor    President. The Chamberlains moved to Lake Tahoe, Nevada where    they engaged in rental as well as property management and held    annual Life Extension Festivals until 1986. They    had to pay hefty legal fees to avoid being dragged into the    Chatsworth lawsuits, a fact that increased their dislike of    Robert Nelson. In 1997 they returned to Alcor when Fred became    President and Linda was placed in charge of delivering cryonics    service. Fred and Linda started two companies (Cells4Life and    BioTransport) associated with Alcor, assuming responsibility    for all unsecured debt of those companies. Financial disaster    and an acrimonious dispute with Alcor management led to Fred    and Linda leaving Alcor in 2001, filing for bankruptcy and    temporarily joining the Cryonics Institute. They returned to    Alcor in 2011, and Fred became an Alcor patient in 2012.  <\/p>\n<p>    Saul Kent, one of the founders of the Cryonics    Society of New York, became one of Alcor's strongest    supporters. He was a close associate of Pearson & Shaw,    authors of the 1982 best-selling book LIFE EXTENSION. Pearson & Shaw were flooded    with mail as a result of their many media appearances, and they    gave the mail to Saul Kent. Kent used that mail to create a    mailing list for a new mail-order business he created for    selling supplements: the Life Extension Foundation(LEF).    Millions of dollars earned from LEF have not only helped build    Alcor, but have created and supported a company doing    cryobiological research (21st Century Medicine), a company doing    anti-ischemia research (Critical Care Research), and a company    developing the means to apply the research to standby and    transport cryonics procedures (Suspended Animation, Inc).  <\/p>\n<p>    In December1987 Kent brought his terminally ill mother    (Dora Kent) into the Alcor facility where she    deanimated. The body (without the head) was given to the local    coroner (Dora Kent was a \"neuro\"). The coroner issued a death    certificate which gave death as due to natural causes.    Barbiturate had been given to Dora Kent after legal death to    slow brain metabolism. The coroner's office did not understand    that circulation was artificially restarted after legal death,    which distributed the barbiturate throughout the body.  <\/p>\n<p>    After the autopsy, the coroner's office changed the cause of    death on the death certificate to homicide. In    January1988 Alcor was raided by coroner's deputies, a    SWAT team, and UCLA police. The Alcor staff was    taken to the police station in handcuffs and the Alcor facility    was ransacked, with computers and records being seized. The    coroner's office wanted to seize Dora Kent's head for autopsy,    but the head had been removed from the Alcor facility and taken    to a location that was never disclosed. Alcor later sued for    false arrest and for illegal seizures, winning both court    cases. (See Dora Kent: Questions and Answers)  <\/p>\n<p>    Growth in Alcor membership was fairly slow    and linear until the mid-1980s, following which there was a    sharp increase in growth. Ironically, publicity surrounding the    Dora Kent case is often cited as one of the reasons for the    growth acceleration. Another reason often cited is the 1986    publication of ENGINES OF CREATION, a seminal book about    nanotechnology which contained an entire chapter devoted to    cryonics (the possibility that nanomachines could repair    freezing damage). Hypothermic dog experiments associated with    cryonics were also publicized in the mid-1980s. In the late    1980s Alcor Member Dick    Clair  who was dying of AIDS  fought in court for the    legal right to practice cryonics in California (a battle that    was ultimately won). But the Cryonics Institute did not    experience a growth spurt until the advent of the internet in    the 1990s. The American Cryonics Society does not publish    membership statistics.  <\/p>\n<p>    Robert Ettinger, Saul Kent and Mike    Darwin are arguably the three individuals who had the most    powerful impact on the early history of cryonics. Having    experimented with the effects of cold on organisms from the    time he was a child, Darwin learned of cryonics at the Indiana    State Science Fair in 1968. He was able to spend summers at the    Cryonics Society of New York (living with Curtis Henderson). Darwin was given the    responsibility of perfusing cryonics patients at the age of 17    in recognition of his technical skills.  <\/p>\n<p>    Born \"Michael Federowicz\", Mike chose to use his high school    nickname \"Darwin\" as a cryonics surname when he began his    career as a kidney dialysis technician. He had been given his    nickname as a result of being known at school for arguing for    evolution, against creationism. He is widely known in cryonics    as \"Mike Darwin\", although his legal surname remains    Federowicz.  <\/p>\n<p>    Not long after Alcor was founded, Darwin moved to California at    the invitation of Fred and Linda Chamberlain. He spent a year    as the world's first full-time dedicated cryonics researcher    until funding ran out. Returning to Indiana, Darwin (along with    Steve Bridge) created a new cryonics organization that    accumulated considerable equipment and technical capability.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1981 Darwin moved back to California, largely because of his    desire to work with Jerry Leaf. In 1982 the Indiana    organization merged with Alcor, and in 1983 Darwin was made    President of Alcor. In California Darwin, Leaf and biochemist    Hugh Hixon (who has considerable engineering skill) developed a    blood substitute capable of sustaining life in dogs for    at least 4hours at or below 9C .    Leaf and Darwin had some nasty confrontations with members of    the Society for Cryobiology over that    organization's 1985 refusal to publish their research. The    Society for Cryobiology adopted a bylaw that prohibited    cryonicists from belonging to the organization. Mike Darwin    later wrote a summary of the conflicts between cryonicists and    cryobiologists under the title Cold War. Similar experiments were done by Paul    Segall and his associates, which generated a great deal of    favorable media exposure for cryonics.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1988 Carlos Mondragon replaced Mike Darwin as Alcor    President because Mondragon proved to be more capable of    handling the stresses of the Dora Kent case. Darwin had vast    medical knowledge (especially as it applies to cryonics), and    possessed exceptional technical skills. He was a prolific and    lucid writer  much of the material in the Alcor    website library was written by Mike Darwin. Darwin worked    as Alcor's Research Director from 1988 to 1992, during which    time he developed a Transport Technician course in which he    trained Alcor Members in the technical skills required to    deliver the initial phases of cryonics service.  <\/p>\n<p>    For undisclosed reasons, Darwin left Alcor in 1992, much to the    distress of many Alcor Members who regarded Mike Darwin as by    far the person in the world most capable of delivering    competent cryonics technical service. In 1993 a new cryonics    organization called CryoCare Foundation was created, largely so    that people could benefit from Darwin's technical skills.    Another strongly disputed matter was the proposed move of Alcor    from California to Arizona (implemented in February 1994).  <\/p>\n<p>    About50 Alcor Members left Alcor to join and form    CryoCare. Darwin delivered standby, transport and perfusion    services as a subcontractor to CryoCare and the American    Cryonics Society (ACS). Cryostorage services were contracted to    CryoCare and ACS by Paul Wakfer. Darwin's company was called    BioPreservation and Wakfer's company was called CryoSpan.    Eventually, serious personality conflicts developed between    Darwin and Wakfer. In 1999 Darwin stopped providing service to    CryoCare and Wakfer turned CryoSpan over to Saul Kent. Kent    then refused to accept additional cryonics patients at    CryoSpan, and was determined to end CryoSpan in a way that    would not harm the cryonics patients being stored there.  <\/p>\n<p>    I (Ben Best) had been CryoCare Secretary, and became    President of CryoCare in 1999 in an attempt to arrange    alternate service providers for CryoCare. The Cryonics Institute agreed to provide cryostorage.    Various contractors were found to provide the other services,    but eventually CryoCare could not be sustained. In 2003 I    became President of the Cryonics Institute. I assisted with the    moving of CryoSpan's two CryoCare patients to Alcor and    CryoSpan's ten ACS patients to the Cryonics Institute. In 2012    I resigned as President of the Cryonics Institute, and began    working for the Life Extension Foundation. Dennis Kowalski became the new CI    President.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mike Darwin continued to work as a researcher at Saul Kent's    company Critical Care Research (CCR) until 2001. Darwin's most    notable accomplishment at CCR was his role in developing    methods to sustain dogs without neurological damage following    17minutes of warm ischemia. Undisclosed conflicts with CCR    management caused Darwin to leave CCR in 2001. He worked    briefly with Alcor and Suspended Animation, and later did consulting work    for the Cryonics Institute. But for the most part Darwin has    been distanced from cryonics organizations.  <\/p>\n<p>    The history of the Cryonics Institute (CI) has been less tumultuous    than that of Alcor. CI has had primarily two Presidents:    Robert Ettinger from April1976 to    September2003, and Ben    Best to June2012. (Andrea Foote was briefly President    in 1994, but soon became ill with ovarian cancer.) Robert    Ettinger decided to build fiberglass cryostats rather than buy dewars because CI's    Detroit facility was too small for dewars. Robert Ettinger's mother became the first patient    of the Cryonics Institute when she deanimated in 1977. She was    placed in dry ice for about ten years until CI began using    liquid nitrogen in 1987 (the same year that Robert Ettinger's    first wife became CI's second patient). In 1994 CI acquired the    Erfurt-Runkel Building in Clinton Township    (a suburb northeast of Detroit) for about $300,000. This is    roughly the same amount of money as had been bequeathed to CI    by CI Member Jack Erfurt (who had deanimated in 1992). Erfurt's    wife (Andrea Foote who deanimated in 1995) also bequeathed    $300,000 to CI. Andy Zawacki, nephew of Connie Ettinger (wife of Robert Ettinger's    son David), built a ten-person cryostat in the new facility.    Fourteen patients were moved from the old Detroit facility to    the new Cryonics Institute facility. Andy Zawacki is a man    of many talents. He has been a CI employee since    January1985 (when he was 19years old), handling    office work (mostly Member sign-ups and contracts), building    maintenance and equipment fabrication, but also patient    perfusion and cool-down.  <\/p>\n<p>    Throughout most of the history of cryonics glycerol has been    the cryoprotectant used to perfuse cryonics patients. Glycerol    reduces, but does not eliminate, ice formation. In the late    1990s research conducted at 21st Century Medicine and at UCLA under the    direction of 21st Century Medicine confirmed that ice formation    in brain tissue could be completely eliminated by a judiciously    chosen vitrification mixture of cryoprotectants. In 2001    Alcor began vitrification perfusion of cryonics patients with a    cryoprotectant mixture called B2C, and not long thereafter adopted a better    mixture called M22. At the Cryonics Institute a    vitrification mixture called CI-VM-1 was developed by CI staff cryobiologist    Dr.Yuri Pichugin (who was employed at CI    from 2001 to 2007). The first CI cryonics patient was vitrified in 2005.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 2002 Alcor cryopreserved baseball legend Ted Williams. Two of    the Williams children attested that their father wanted to be    cryopreserved, but a third child protested bitterly.    Journalists at Sports Illustrated wrote a sensationalistic    expose of Alcor based on information supplied to them by Alcor employee    Larry Johnson, who had surreptitiously tape-recorded many    conversations in the facility. The ensuing media circus led to    some nasty moves by politicians to incapacitate cryonics    organizations. In Arizona, state representative Bob Stump    attempted to put Alcor under the control of the Funeral Board.    The Arizona Funeral Board Director told the New York Times \"These companies    need to be regulated or deregulated out of business\". Alcor    fought hard, and in 2004 the legislation was withdrawn. Alcor hired    a full-time lobbyist to watch after their interests in the    Arizona legislature. Although the Cryonics Institute had not been involved in the    Ted Williams case, the State of Michigan placed the    organization under a \"Cease and Desist\" order for six months,    ultimately classifying and regulating the Cryonics Institute as    a cemetery in 2004. In the spirit of de-regulation, the new    Republican Michigan government removed the cemetary designation    for CI in 2012.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 2002 Suspended Animation, Inc(SA) was    created to do research on improved delivery of cryonics    services, and to provide those services to other cryonics    organizations. In 2003 SA perfused a cryonics patient for the    American Cryonics Society, and the patient was stored at the    Cryonics Institute. Alcor has long offered standby and    transport services to its Members as an integral part of    Membership, but the Cryonics Institute (CI) had not done    so. In 2005 the CI Board of Directors approved contracts with    SA which would allow CI Members the option of receiving SA    standby and transport if they so chose. Several years later,    all Alcor standby cases in the continental United States    outside of Arizona were handled by SA, and SA COO Catherine    Baldwin became an Alcor Director. Alcor has continued to do standby    and stabilization in Arizona. Any Alcor Member who is diagnosed    as being terminally ill with a prognosis of less than 90 days    of life will be reimbursed $10,000 for moving to a hospice in    the Phoenix, Arizona area. By 2014, over160 of the roughly 550CI Members    who had arrangements for cryopreservation services from CI had    opted to also have Standby, Stabilization and    Transport(SST) from SA.  <\/p>\n<p>    A Norwegian ACS Member named Trygve Bauge brought his deceased    grandfather to the United States and stored the body at Trans    Time from 1990 to 1993. Bauge then transported his grandfather    to Nederland, Colorado in dry ice with the intention of    starting his own cryonics company. But Bauge was deported back    to Norway and the story of his grandfather created a media    circus. The town outlawed cryonics, but had to \"grandfather the    grandfather\" who has remained there on dry ice. After a    \"cooling-off period\" locals turned the publicity to their    advantage by creating an annual Frozen Dead Guy Days festival which features    coffin races, snow sculptures, etc. Many cryonicists insist    that dry ice is not cold enough for long-term cryopreservation    and that the Nederland festival is negative publicity for    cryonics.  <\/p>\n<p>    After several years of management turnover at Alcor, money was    donated to find a lasting President. In January 2011, Max    More was selected as the new President and CEO of Alcor. In    July 2011 Robert Ettinger was cryopreseved at CI after a standby organized by his son and    daughter-in-law. In July 2012 Ben Best ended his 9-year    service as CI President and CEO by going to work for the    Life Extension Foundation as Director of    Research Oversight. The Life Extension Foundation is the major    source of cryonics-related research, including funding for    21st Century Medicine, Suspended Animation,    Inc., and Advanced Neural Biosciences, and funds many anti-aging research projects as    well. Dennis Kowalski became the new CI    President. Ben Best retired as CI Director in September 2014.  <\/p>\n<p>    In January 2011 CI shipped its vitrification solution (CI-VM-1) to the United Kingdom so that European    cryonics patients could be vitrified before shipping in dry ice    to the United States. This procedure was applied to the    wife of UK cryonicist Alan Sinclair in May    2013. In the summer of 2014 Alcor began offering this \"field    vitrication\" service to its members in Canada and overseas.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 2006 the first cryonics organization to offer cryonics    services outside of the United States was created in Russia.    KrioRus has a facility in a Moscow suburb where    many cryonics patients are being stored in liquid nitrogen. In    2014 Oregon Cryonics (created by former CI Director    Jordan Sparks) began providing neuro(head or brain)-only    services at low cost for cryopreservation and chemical    preservation.  <\/p>\n<p>    (For details on the current status of the different cryonics    organizations, see Comparing Procedures and Policies.)  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)<\/p>\n<p>      HOME    PAGE  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.benbest.com\/cryonics\/history.html\" title=\"A History of Cryonics - BEN BEST\">A History of Cryonics - BEN BEST<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> by Ben Best Robert Ettinger is widely regarded as the \"father of cryonics\" (although he often said that he would rather be the grandson). Mr.Ettinger earned a Purple Heart in World WarII as a result of injury to his leg by an artillery shell. He subsequently became a college physics teacher after earning two Master's Degrees from Wayne State University.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/a-history-of-cryonics-ben-best\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187739],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-173848","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-cryonics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173848"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=173848"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173848\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=173848"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=173848"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=173848"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}