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By Austin Wyss | May 30th 2009 04:11 AM | 3 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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More The Inebriated Inventor articles

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About Austin Wyss

A student of neurology and nanotechnology. ... Full Bio

Nanobots seem to be well on their way to drastically expanding human life. Clusters of them are already regenerating the spinal cords of mice (Project, 2007), and soon it should be possible to program them to repair all of our aging and defected cells (Lindsay, 2005). But nanotechnology is not the only thing in our favor. Scientists have recently even begun to conquer the telomere problem (Mann, 2009).

By making the lifestyle changes known to be currently effective towards extending vitality, such as cutting sugar intake, we may yet live long enough to live forever. 

References:

Lindsay, J. (2005). Inventor Sets His Eyes On Immortality. Retrieved May 30, 2009 from http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6959575/

Mann, H. (2009). The Egg: Fountain Of Youth For Sperm. Retrieved May 30, 2009 from http://www.scientificblogging.com/alternate_allele/egg_fountain_youth_sperm

Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (2007). Nanotechnology Offers Hope. Retrieved May 30, 2009 from http://www.nanotechproject.org/news/archive/nanotechnology_offers_hope_f...



Comments

Gerhard Adam's picture
"...we may yet live long enough to live forever..."

The irony is that many people wouldn't view that as a curse.

Wyss's picture
Infinite life is similar to infinite wealth I think; ultimately the view of being either blessed or cursed would be purely subjective. That, and both exist only in the realm of fantasy. Would you view it as a curse?

Gerhard Adam's picture
Infinite life is also infinitely tedious.  Something only has value when it can end or be lost.  Specifically, death is what makes life valuable.  It's what creates the motivation to get up in the morning.  Without anything but the vastness of time in front of you, how could anyone bear the tedium of existence?

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