2029? Seriously? 2029? — The Great Whatever
That would depend on your definition of eternal life (for example, would it involve becoming a cyborg?), and your plan for obtaining it (e.g., the phased replacement of your failing body parts with robotic parts)."Should I dedicate all my time to the pursue of eternal life" — AXF
Actually, human cognitive states are complex beyond anything we can currently imagine. Also, the screenplay for Frankenstein has already been written (spoiler: it didn't end in happiness).Given the current advancements in AI, genetics and chemistry, it is not unfathomable that at some point in the future we could 'engineer' cognitive states that are amazing beyond anything we can currently imagine. Combine the two and you have the ultimate goal achieved - never ending happiness. — AXF
Just give up my humanity for the benefit of the IT industry and medical profession (among others), and the empty promise of an everlasting transhumanist nirvana? Hmm, let me think about it. No thanks.You should not spend any resources towards making a family, pursuing hobbys or taking care of your parents... — AXF
You go first, and let me know how it works out. What do you do for a living? Stand-up comedy? Used car salesman? Everglades estate agent?It is like an investment with an endless potential profit and a slightly painful consequence if it fails. It's worth making. — AXF
So potentially, if we could tackle every single cause of death, the human body should have no expiry date. — AXF
The general consensus is that death always occurs for a technical reason (the heart fails, brain cells die etc...). So potentially, if we could tackle every single cause of death, the human body should have no expiry date. This is now an accepted paradigm to the level that
many companies and research centres define their long term mission as to 'cure death' or 'extend human life indefinitely' (one example of many is Google backed company Calcio). — AXF
- Being Mortal, Atul Gawande, pp. 31-32.Why we age is the subject of vigorous debate. The classical view is that ageing happens because of random wear and tear. The newest view holds that ageing is more orderly and genetically programmed. Proponents of this view point out that animals of similar species and exposure to wear and tear have markedly different life spans... The idea that living things shut down instead of wearing down has received substantial support in recent years. Researchers working with the now famous C. elegans (twice in one decade, Nobel Prizes went to scientists doing work on the little nematode) were able, by altering a single gene, to produce worms that live more than twice as long and age more slowly. Scientists have since come up with single-gene alterations that increase the life spans of fruit flies, mice, and yeast. These findings notwithstanding, the preponderance of the evidence is against the idea that our life spans are programmed into us. —
"Should I dedicate all my time to the pursue of eternal life" — AXF
So...to maximise our chances for everlasting happiness, should we spend our lives chasing money at all cost or do some other stuff? What do you think? — AXF
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