Living Forever??

Soldato
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I've been following Aubrey de Grey for a long time and he thinks 50% chance of reaching aging escape velocity in 15 years time. By which point it would be possible for humans to start having 'negative' birthdays.

It's a nice thought living indefinitely, certainly improving quality of life in old age, .. even middle age. The thing is that once humans start merging with technology in future, neural interfaces and memory upgrades etc, then where do people find a reason for existence? That shelf of books that you haven't read can be assimilated in milliseconds. Learning new things will be a piece of cake. Humans will need to find new challenges, new past times, unless they choose to live in a simulation and recreate the old arduous times.
 
Man of Honour
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I'm old enough to value what the experiments referred to in the OP are actually about - making being old less crap. Immortality is just the clickbait, not the actual content.

Eternal youth with a high standard of living and the option of a simple and painless suicide would have some appeal, but that's not on the cards.

I've been following Aubrey de Grey for a long time and he thinks 50% chance of reaching aging escape velocity in 15 years time. By which point it would be possible for humans to start having 'negative' birthdays.

It's a nice thought living indefinitely, certainly improving quality of life in old age, .. even middle age. The thing is that once humans start merging with technology in future, neural interfaces and memory upgrades etc, then where do people find a reason for existence? That shelf of books that you haven't read can be assimilated in milliseconds. Learning new things will be a piece of cake. Humans will need to find new challenges, new past times, unless they choose to live in a simulation and recreate the old arduous times.

So much of life today is essentially about obfuscating the fact that almost everyone's life is pointless. The core of the issues you refer to is that they remove the obfuscation.
 
Soldato
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So much of life today is essentially about obfuscating the fact that almost everyone's life is pointless. The core of the issues you refer to is that they remove the obfuscation.

When I look at Maslow's hierarchy of needs, up to now they are still relevant. Humans have a striving nature towards the higher levels of the pyramid. In the future I think the pyramid will be obliterated. It's the kind of existential problem people have when they win the lottery and didn't earn it.
 
Soldato
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An interesting thought experiment. Living forever would be interesting as there’s always new developments and things to learn. Though it would cause an even bigger over population issue.

I wonder if we could end up in a Blade Runner style scenerio with enforced euthanasia.
 
Associate
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Massive wall of text incoming. I found a topic on this subject on Reddit a few years ago and saved it. It's obviously just of fun but I always find it interesting to read now and then.



The first thing you'll realize when you start thinking about this is that to have a non-zero chance of dying you have to live forever. We're not talking about just living indefinitely long, replacing organs as you go and whatnot, but instead I should be able to name any time in the future and you'll still be around. Let's take a look at what that will take.

100 years: I'll assume you're in your early twenties right now so I have a number to work with. The longest living person that I'm aware of was Jeanne Calment who lived to the age of 122. So, if you want to live another 100 years, you could maybe do it just with good genes and good luck. We're only looking for a non-zero chance, so we're doing good so far.

200 years: Congratulations! You've lived another 200 years and managed to break all records of human lifespan previously known. To get to this point unprecedented medical advances have been made. New organs can be grown replaced as you need them, and methods have been devised to keep your brain cells healthy, or at least to replace them bit by bit. Or maybe you do get a brain replacement every now and then, but your old memories, personality, intelligence, etc. are imprinted on it. Would that still count as you? For the sake of argument let's say sure, why not.

Almost as important as the advances in medical technology is your access to it. Perhaps this tech is available only to the rich and influential, or maybe it's so cheap and easy everyone can use it. In any case, you've managed to discover the fountain of youth, and you have a long life ahead of you.

10,000 years: A lot has changed in your lifetime. You're one of the oldest humans alive, having been lucky enough to be in the first generation that had access to effective immortality. Aging and disease are distant memories. You've managed to live through the strife caused by the end of death. Perhaps that elixir of immortality is available to only a select few, or perhaps humanity has spread beyond Earth to cope with an ever-growing population, or maybe childbirth is strictly controlled. Whatever happened society lives on, and you with it.

100,000 years: You've managed to go a thousand centuries without your head getting crushed under the back wheels of a bus. Kudos.

1,000,000 years: A million years. Wow. How much memory can the human mind hold, anyway? Do you remember your childhood, your first kiss, the face of your parents? Perhaps you have some sort of external memory. How recognizable would you be now to yourself in the year 2013AD? Are you still human, even? Whatever you are, let's say that you're still you, and you've lived this long.

You've seen the rise and fall of countless civilizations. Most of human history is in your mind. The invention of agriculture and the city happened a mere 10,000 years before you were born; at this point, that's pretty much a rounding error in your age.

109 years: The Earth is about 5.54 billion years old now. You've been around for 18% of that. When you were born there had been five major mass extinction events in Earth's history. Has another one happened by now? Perhaps a giant comet or meteor has struck the Earth in your lifetime, shrouding it in a cloud of debris that blocked the sun. Maybe a nearby star went super nova and bathed the Earth in gamma radiation, driving you and everyone else underground. Whatever has or hasn't happened, humanity must have god-like technology by now for you to have survived this long. We're definitely in the realm of science fiction now, but you said 100% certainty, so why not?

3 x 109 years: The Milky Way and the nearby Andromeda galaxy merge. You've seen Andromeda grow in the night sky from the little smudge it is today to a giant, sky filling wonder. Don't worry, galaxies are mostly empty space, so it's very unlikely that our sun will be hit by another star. You and whoever else is around will have to think of a name for the new galaxy that forms.

5 x 109 years: You're about half as old as the Earth now and the sun is dying. As it burns through its hydrogen fuel it begins to fuse helium and heavier elements. The sun expands and swallows up the planet Mercury, then Venus. You had better hope that there was a well funded space program sometime in the last few billion years because Earth is not a fun place right now. The oceans have boiled away and the surface is a scorched desert, to say the least. At noon the giant, red sun fills the entire sky from horizon to horizon. Hopefully you've invested in a nice retirement home on Europa.

1010 years: You're about half as old as the universe and Earth (and the rest of the solar system) is long gone. Has the problem of traveling faster than light ever been solved? Can you zip between stars with your warp drive, or do you just accept that trip will take a while? You've certainly got the time to travel, and if you're going at relativistic speeds it doesn't even seem to take that long to you. By now lots of good books have likely been written, so hopefully you'll have something to keep yourself busy on your voyages between stars.

1011 years: The galaxies in the Local Group begin to merge together into one giant galaxy. Guess you'll have to come up with yet another galaxy name.

1012 years: Half-Life 3 is released. It doesn't live up to your expectations.

2 x 1012 years: Remember how you had to keep coming up with galaxy names? Well, the universe is constantly expanding and all other galaxies have receded beyond the edge of the observable universe. So, since there's only galaxy sitting in the middle of a black emptiness that stretches billions of light years in each direction it seems kind of redundant to bother naming it. When you meet new alien lifeforms and civilizations you try to tell them that the universe used to be full of galaxies just like the one you're in now, but it seems a little farfetched to them.

3 x 1012 years: You and whatever's left of humanity and the other races you've met clearly have amazing powers to have lasted this long. You may as well get a hobby. Why not find a planet with primitive intelligent life and convince them you're God? Get a few friends together and get followers on different continents, and see whose worshipers dominate the world. Best RTS ever.

1014 years: Star formation ceases. The stars that currently exist burn out one by one, leaving dimly glowing dwarf stars, fast spinning pulsars, black holes, etc. The night sky (assuming you're even on a planet right now) grows darker with each passing aeon as the stars wink out of existence. You've been around a long time, and you start to feel an emotion you almost forgot the existence of; an existential fear of your ultimate fate.

1015 years: You're having a hard time finding a welcoming planet. The ones that haven't fallen into their parent stars have been flung into interstellar space, drifting forever in the cold darkness. Perhaps you and what's left of the other intelligent races have undertaken a massive engineering project to keep the light of life burning in a dying universe. You and the others build an artificial star at the centre of a Dyson sphere, a solar system sized construct surrounding your new sun. This is the last bastion of civilization and intelligent life, a flickering candle in the infinite darkness. Memories of everything and everyone that ever was is stored in vast libraries. You and the other immortals try to discover new physics to stave off the inevitable.

1018 years: You stare into the abyss, wondering if there are other bastions of civilization like yours that exist beyond the edge of the observable universe.

1020 years: Similar to the fate of the planets, stellar remnants are flung from the galaxy or begin falling into black holes. The One Galaxy grows smaller and denser, increasing the speed of this process. You and the Immortals are mindful of this and carefully plot the trajectory of your home. Perhaps you're somehow finding fuel for it to keep the star at its centre burning, or maybe you have to keep making new ones. As the last galaxy dies, you're concerned that you can't keep this up forever. You continue your study of physics; no new discoveries have been made in aeons, but you keep looking for loop-holes in the laws of nature that might save you. Many others have decided this is futile and have accepted their fate, leaving your collective to drift lifeless among the remains of the stars. You press on.

1040 years: You know protons, one of the subatomic particles that (along with neutrons and electrons) make up the atoms and molecules of all matter that you interact with? Most of them are gone by now, having decayed away in a slow but inevitable process. All regular matter that's left is a rare resource. If you've somehow, miraculously, against all odds made it to this point, you're most likely alone. Everything is cold, dark, empty, unforgiving.

10100 years: All that's left in the universe is you (somehow) and black holes. How are you even still alive? The vast majority of your existence, so much so that everything else is barely even worth mentioning, has just been you floating in darkness with nothing but black holes for company. Even they are starting to vanish as they evaporate through Hawking radiation, shrinking in mass and then winking out of existence.

Beyond: There are still some photons, electrons, and other things flying about, but the universe is so vast and empty that they hardly ever interact with each other. It's uncertain what the future holds at this point, but you won't be around to see it. Some of the electrons that were once part of you are still around I suppose, somewhere, but it's impossible at this point that anything that could be considered "you" could remain. Perhaps other universes exist or will come into existence, and if there are an infinity of them then some entity very much like you could very will exist in them, but the "you" that you are now will be gone, irrecoverably, forever. The light of life in the universe has guttered and been extinguished.

tl;dr: Maybe you can beat cancer and AIDS and aging and go live among the stars, but you'll never escape entropy.
 
Associate
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27 Aug 2003
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An interesting thought experiment. Living forever would be interesting as there’s always new developments and things to learn. Though it would cause an even bigger over population issue.

I wonder if we could end up in a Blade Runner style scenerio with enforced euthanasia.

more likely if you get the “live forever pill” you also get the “no babies” pill
 

Deleted member 236143

D

Deleted member 236143

Click bait nonsense.
Realistically though there is a reasonable possibility that the best of care and tech will soon extend life into the 120 maybe even 140 ish age.
CEO monsters holding on to their wills.
Facebook Palpatines.
 
Caporegime
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22 Nov 2005
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I wonder if we could end up in a Blade Runner style scenerio with enforced euthanasia.
already two tier health care for the poor so .....

Couldn't get an appointment at my doctors surgery because it's rationed like emergency dental appointments.

my swiss insurance covers the whole of Europe, I used it to get seen privately by a GP instead.
seems they don't ration antibiotics so much when you get private too.... cos I just got a whole weeks worth, my mum said when she had sepsis she literally got 6 tablets, went back still ill and got a whole 1 more tablet.

also the ambulance who came out when she was collapsed on the floor unable to stand up were just going to leave her at home but my dad convinced them to run a second set of tests and her pulse set alarm bells ringing.

your essentially human garbage and no one cares if your poor.

if you can get private health care do it before it's too late

anyone poor will have DNR tags in hospital soon covid already lead the way
 
Caporegime
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^ You'd both be dead (also poor) if you lived in the US so that's something to think about. Unless you mean something else by two tier health care.

I'd like to live forever just so I could sing the Oasis song with the gravitas it deserves.
 
Commissario
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Panting like a fiend
Would certainly like to extend my life beyond current limits, especially if that came with good health.

That's the kicker, living to 200-300 years with most of it as say a 20-40 year old in good health would be great, living to 200-300 with most of it in increasingly aged and poor health (so you live say 200 years as a 90 year old with all the normal health problems), not so great.

I guess the good thing about the billionaires and their attempts at immortality is that they're at least possibly going to put some of their wealth into things that might help the average person in the long run (IE research into medical care), and the slightly smarter ones might start to consider what the world is going to be like in a hundred years and invest accordingly, if just to try and make it a more pleasant place for themselves.
Unfortunately from what I've seen many of the billionaires are more into quackery and vanity.
 
Soldato
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Unless you could stop the aging process at a specific age then what's the point living "forever" if your body keeps getting older, I mean who wants to be 200yo but with the body of a 200yo?
 
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