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Conceivably, but who would want to wake up as a museum curiosity?
But isn't the true goal of Science - the conquest of human death.
Quote from: charles1948 on 08/12/2020 21:04:40But isn't the true goal of Science - the conquest of human death. No. If nobody dies, the world will gradually fill with old people until there is nothing to eat and nowhere to stand. There will be no distinction between people and cancer. Except that 1000-year-old cancer cells don't keep saying "In my day..." and boring the arse off the young.Knowing that you are immortal means that you can procrastinate everything, so there will be no progress. Why should I bother to investigate dark matter, knowing that eventually someone else will find the answer and I'll be around to hear it? And you are presuming that the world will be a better place in a hundred or a thousand years. What evidence do you have? Scum like Trump and Isis are an ever-present threat to human dignity and intellect. Knowing that I only have a short time to fix things, I'll do my best to stop the rot, but the best guess is a 50% chance that my great grandchildren will inhabit a corrupt and stinking theocracy or a world-wide civil or religious war, and I'd rather be dead.The goal of intelligent and caring people should be to let everyone choose the time and mode of his death.
But even if you woke up as a "museum curiosity" ,wouldn't it be so interesting to see what happens in the Future?
It could be through cryogenics
whether a method of a Trisecting any given Angle, using only straight-edge and compasses, is finally discovered.
None of us wants to wants to die.
at the present time, we can't prevent it happening.
The goal should be to get rid of death altogether.
Quote from: charles1948 on 09/12/2020 00:19:47None of us wants to wants to die. Most people are rightly afraid of the process of dying, because in a world run by superstitious parasites, you aren't allowed to assist a suicide, so the dying person has to suffer every kind of pain and indignity until they are transferred to something like the "Liverpool Pathway", which is a euphemism for criminal negligence. But nobody need be afraid of being dead. It's the state of having no further problems.So when we eventually remove superstition and incompetence and introduce rationality into the laws surrounding death, we will move one step closer to differentiating man from beast, by allowing man to choose how and when he dies, if necessary at the hand of a caring professional. Quoteat the present time, we can't prevent it happening. Look both ways before you cross the road, check your tyres and brakes, eat your greens, and everything else that Mum told you, will at least give you more time to live. QuoteThe goal should be to get rid of death altogether. Not my goal. I enjoyed bringing children into the world and educating them, but if I don't die, where are their descendants going to live, and what are they going to eat? Or are you going to outlaw reproduction? Vaccines are developed to prevent disease, not death. In this respect the military have a far better understanding than journalists and politicians: sublethal weapons impose an ongoing burden of casualties on the enemy, whereas corpses are merely a temporary impediment. 250,000 COVID deaths in the USA has simply increased the profits of undertakers and reduced the Republican vote a bit, but 15,000,000 people on sick leave has seriously damaged the economy without significantly improving the Senate or Supreme Court.
Doesn't this argument assume that everyone would want the same thing ? And as you said "chose how and what time they want to die" I don't think overcoming ageing means overcoming death. I think biological immortality is worth it and can give many people who didn't have a good life the option to live further
give many people who didn't have a good life the option to live further