The Abolition of Aging: различия между версиями

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Версия от 14:00, 29 декабря 2017

The Abolition of Aging is a 2016 book by David Wood with the stated aim to provide[1]

A bird’s eye report from the frontiers of the accelerating field of rejuvenation biology:

  • The goals and motivations of key players in this field
  • The rapid progress that has been achieved in the last few years
  • The challenges that threaten to thwart further development
  • The critical questions that need to be faced.

Themes

Rejuveneering

Taking its lead from trial use of the term[2] by Aubrey de Grey at the 2010 Humanity+ UK event in London, the book refers[3] to the "Rejuveneering project":

A multi-decade cross-disciplinary endeavour to engineer human rejuvenation and thereby enable the choice to abolish aging.

The book defends the argument[3] that the rejuveneering project has around a 50% chance of comprehensive success by the year 2040:

Within our collective grasp dwells the remarkable possibility of the abolition of biological aging.

It’s a big “if”, but if we decide as a species to make this project a priority, there’s around a 50% chance that practical rejuvenation therapies resulting in the comprehensive reversal of aging will be widely available as early as 2040.

People everywhere, on the application of these treatments, will, if they wish, stop becoming biologically older. Instead, again if they wish, they’ll start to become biologically younger, in both body and mind, as rejuvenation therapies take hold. In short, everyone will have the option to become ageless.

Abolition

The book uses the term "abolition" in explicit reference[3] to the prior abolition of slavery:

Accepting aging can be compared to accepting slavery.

For millennia, people from all social classes took slavery for granted. Thoughtful participants may have seen drawbacks with the system, but they assumed that there was no alternative to the basic fact of slavery. They could not conceive how society would function properly without slaves. Even the Bible takes slavery as a given. There is no Mosaic commandment which says “Thou shalt not keep slaves”. Nor is there anything in the New Testament that tells slave owners to set their slaves free.

But in recent times, thank goodness, the public mind changed. The accepting-slavery paradigm wilted in the face of a crescendo of opposing arguments. As with slavery, so also with aging: the time will come for its abolition. The public will cease to take aging for granted. They’ll stop believing in spurious justifications for its inevitability. They’ll demand better. They’ll see how rejuvenation is ready to be embraced.

One reason why slavery is so objectionable is the extent of its curtailment of human opportunity – the denial of free choice to the people enslaved. Another reason is that life expectancy of slaves frequently fell far short of the life expectancy of people not enslaved. As such, slavery can be counted as a major killer: it accelerated death.

From the anticipating-rejuvenation perspective, aging should be seen as the biggest killer of all. Compared to “standard” killers of the present day, such as drunken driving, terrorism, lead fumes, or other carcinogens – killers which rouse us to action to constrain them – aging destroys many more people. Globally, aging is the cause of at least two thirds of human deaths. Aging is the awful elephant in the room, which we have collectively learned to ignore, but which we must learn to recognise and challenge anew.

Every single week the rejuveneering project is delayed, hundreds of thousands more people suffer and die worldwide due to aging-related diseases. Advocates of rejuveneering see this ongoing situation as a needless slaughter. It’s an intolerable offence against human potential.

Knowledgebase

The book's website notes[4] that H+Pedia can be used to highlight and update information as identified at the end of the book as critical for the overall success of the rejuveneering project:

  • The community’s best thoughts as to credible roadmaps for progress that can be made in the rejuveneering project in the years ahead
  • The strengths and weaknesses of various theories of aging
  • The treatments and therapies that are being developed or which are proposed
  • The lifestyle changes which have the best chance, upon adoption, to keep individuals alive and healthy until such time as “Bridge 2” therapies become available
  • The history of the overall field (to avoid needless repetition of previous mistakes)
  • The broader political, social, psychological, and philosophical dimensions of rejuveneering
  • The projects which are actively looking for assistance, and which the community judges to be worthy of support
  • The memes of various sorts, at any given time, which are the most effective at winning new supporters and in responding to criticism
  • The skills which are in short supply within the community, and the best ways in which various skills can be deployed in support of the rejuveneering goals
  • The areas where genuine differences of opinion exist, and the proposed methods for how the community may be able to resolve these differences
  • The risks which the community is tracking, and the proposed mitigations for these risks.

References