Ubbquittious wrote: » It seems quite inefficient and wasteful to keep introducing new people to the world who will make the same mistakes and do the same stupid things as the crowd before them.
Ubbquittious wrote: » Eventual some biopharmaceutical megacorp will find a way around this pesky aging and death problem
silverharp wrote: » imagine the grudges , its probably better that the past gets relegated to history also people might become overly risk adverse if you had an infinite future ahead to protect
Fourier wrote: » That's a massive assumption.
Wibbs wrote: » I suspect living much beyond say three hundred will remain largely out of reach.
seamus wrote: » It's irrelevant really. Eventually the universe will die a heat death and be nothing more than an homogenous soup of subatomic particles. .
archer22 wrote: » No bloody way...for one thing it would stop evolution which is the whole purpose of being born and reproducing with others creating offspring slightly different to yourself and then dying to make room for them. But one other good reason now is climate change..you don't want to be around in 900 years time or even 100 years from now!!
seamus wrote: » It's irrelevant really. Eventually the universe will die a heat death and be nothing more than an homogenous soup of subatomic particles.
wakka12 wrote: » In the hypothetical situation where ageing is 'cured' as in the OP, medical advances would be such that humans could easily alter any physical characteristic very easily, so the evolution thing is irrelevant as evolution would be obsolete Theres a lot of other issues though, such as food and space. And I think living forever would cause a great deal of depression within the population, and people questioning their reason for life and what the point of living is. Personally I think life is a bit short. And most humans don't get to experience many amazing things about planet earth before they die. But I don't know if it'd be a good thing if we lived forever.
Skyrimaddict wrote: » In theory, you could live forever if you can alter the cells to repair at the same rate and in the correct order that they do during your early years. Look at some species of shark who live for 20-440 years as the cells the grow essentially replenish the body, cells only die and replace in much later years. If you could control your cell production levels and rate you could keep your body going as in a state of really what ever age you wanted. As said though, we would not evolve, unless we reproduce with healthy cells but with all the artificial reproduction methods today such as IVF that is becoming less stringent anyway. What will happen is dome form of hybrid like transcendance where we have our minds intact with artificial bodies, once we figure out AI and can use this to load up our own thought patterns and assimilate information the need for evolution will cease.
Skyrimaddict wrote: What will happen is dome form of hybrid like transcendance where we have our minds intact with artificial bodies, once we figure out AI and can use this to load up our own thought patterns and assimilate information the need for evolution will cease.
Bambi985 wrote: » Good god no, who the hell would want to stick around this hole indefinitely? I reckon I'd be glad to kick the bucket after around 80 years of this sh1t.