General / Off-Topic Living "Forever" ?

Such a revolution in medicine would be a massive flashpoint for a horrendous war.

If the super-rich can live forever - my mates and I will ensure this tech is shared. I'm guessing even with the fixes in the DNA they wouldn't survive bullets.
 
Well to be honest I'm not a believer, but I have played with the thought of going to heaven with Ned Flanders et al, or down under where they have this animated party going on with awesome pyrotechnic and promiscuous women. :unsure:
Even if afterthe death there is only nothingness, the eternal life would not be a renewed chore again and again ?

Life or nothingness. It's crazy how adding the word "eternal" can complicate the choice.

:)
 
Even if afterthe death there is only nothingness, the eternal life would not be a renewed chore again and again ?

Life or nothingness. It's crazy how adding the word "eternal" can complicate the choice.

:)
That's an interesting angle....

As part of my job I have to deal with a lot of elderly, not face to face, some of them are around 100, the oldest was 106. If they’re paperwork is on my desk, they have to be alive. Anyway, I’m 50 and I look at these 100 year olds and I cant imagine living my lifetime again. I don’t think I can. It’s not that I hate life, I just don’t cling to it or even rate it.

Life is futile and I’m dead cosy with that, frees me of lots of things but wanting to live forever? No thanks.
I'm not totally disagreeing with you. I just don't know if I would use the word "futile" as such to describe living. In my view, good, bad or indifferent, it just is was it is. One gets whatever Nature gives and you suck it up.

There is not so much futility; just impermanence.
 
Last edited:
Yes and even existential.
I've always been a fan of Existentialism. Satre and Camus said some good stuff.

Another thought: All this life-extension concept may be seen as humans messing with and flying in the face of Nature. As history has told us, Nature has a nasty habit of biting us back when we do stuff that messes with "the grand design".

Eventually the rent becomes due....

I've noticed that mathematicians working with infinities often get this strange, haunted and scared look on their face.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDogScg_pUI

In my limited understanding of Quantum Mechanics uncertainty is fundamental to those physical models.....
 
Last edited:
I've noticed that mathematicians working with infinities often get this strange, haunted and scared look on their face.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDogScg_pUI

Now that I began to study maths, I've heard rumors from students and professors that those who study maths at research level are autistic/odd/crazy and they don't say that as an insult at all (hell, my professors are mathematicians). In any case, one can avoid infinity more than it appears, for example, limits are formally defined using equivalences and order of the reals although the reals themselves are shocking.
 
If anyone introduced "uncertainty" to maths, it was this guy:

iu


He wasn't free of mental issues either, he died of starvation after his wife met the same fate. Why? He thought he'd be poisoned.
 
I think wrapping your brain around concepts as infinity and eternity will alter your understanding of reality somewhat. An example: Lets say you could live "forever". Many many years into the future the Universe will probably reach the state we call "Heat Death" were entropy is infinitely large and everything is the same. Does time then go on? If time was created with the three spatial dimensions, does the future already exist? What is "now"?
 
I've noticed that mathematicians working with infinities often get this strange, haunted and scared look on their face.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDogScg_pUI
If anyone introduced "uncertainty" to maths, it was this guy:

iu


He wasn't free of mental issues either, he died of starvation after his wife met the same fate. Why? He thought he'd be poisoned.
"If quantum mechanics hasn't profoundly shocked you, you haven't understood it yet".- Niels Bohr

Also: say my name................

images


I think wrapping your brain around concepts as infinity and eternity will alter your understanding of reality somewhat. An example: Lets say you could live "forever". Many many years into the future the Universe will probably reach the state we call "Heat Death" were entropy is infinitely large and everything is the same. Does time then go on? If time was created with the three spatial dimensions, does the future already exist? What is "now"?
Yes; if you could "live forever" what happens when the last photon in this universe reaches the point of zero energy?

The whole live forever concept, in the current physical model, violates the Laws of Thermodynamics.
 
Last edited:
The meaning of "forever" in this context-

Suppose there was an intervention we could do, to prolong our lives. Just a bit.
Can we do that now? Yep. You could control your blood pressure and get that. Or just walk 1/2 hour a day. Or lose a few pounds, and adjust your diet a bit. Or quit a bad habit like smoking, or implement eating more fresh veggies, beans, and fruit.

Let's say we did all those basic things. And we got say a conservative 15% extension in lifespan. Suppose, that for you, that works out to 10 years or so.

Humanity now has 10 years to come up with something else new, that can get you some more years. A vaccine, or a new medicine, maybe an implant, or viral gene therapy, or artificial organs, or something.

Then we get more time to get the next advance.

So basically we need to achieve a rate of new discoveries, that matches or exceeds the gain of years that the person lives for each interval. This theoretical rate of new discoveries is loosely called the "Escape Velocity". Because of the incredible rate of published papers now, it is probable that we already are there. To know for sure, we'd have to know everything in those papers, and apply it properly, and then see how long we get. No human can do that.

So the Escape Velocity will really emerge, when we get medical grade AI.

This of course raises the famous Axe paradox of the ancient Greeks.
If you have a simple axe with just a blade and handle, and use it long enough, the handle will fail first and be replaced. Many handles later, you have to get a new blade too.
Is it still YOUR old axe? or has it become something completely new?
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom