How Long Could Science Increase Our Lifespan?

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Science Unbound

Science Unbound

Күн бұрын

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@jonathanpicket124
@jonathanpicket124 Жыл бұрын
As someone who studies aging in worms, I am completely convinced that we will cure aging. I am a huge fan of the approach that the SENS foundation and other research institutes are taking. Never before in human history have we had the tools necessary to put the puzzle pieces together like we do now. It's a very exciting time to be alive!
@jonathanpicket124
@jonathanpicket124 Жыл бұрын
@Gonzalo De La Maza Mendizabal except that problematic mutations could theoretically be fixed with a combination of more advancements in sequencing technologies and targeted CRISPR delivery technologies (similar to the currently developed RNA delivery methods in RNA vaccines). These technologies are already here and being used, it's simply a matter of continued development. 😁
@frojojo5717
@frojojo5717 Жыл бұрын
Yeah! I fully expect to be chillin during the heat death of the universe. Keep up the good work.
@usern4metak3ns
@usern4metak3ns Жыл бұрын
Worms basically recycle themselves. However I doubt they have much consciousness
@jonathanpicket124
@jonathanpicket124 Жыл бұрын
@@usern4metak3ns all multicellular organisms basically recycle themselves. That's exactly why studying a much simpler organism like worms is useful for understanding how things work in humans. There are a lot of conserved mechanisms.
@usern4metak3ns
@usern4metak3ns Жыл бұрын
@@jonathanpicket124 well my frame of mind is maybe they are simple creatures, because they recycle themselves
@pucknorris3473
@pucknorris3473 Жыл бұрын
Imagine how many channels simon is going to have in 158 years.
@bateman2112
@bateman2112 Жыл бұрын
All of them
@ddanielsandberg
@ddanielsandberg Жыл бұрын
KZbin + 158 years = SimonsTube
@oldschoolman1444
@oldschoolman1444 Жыл бұрын
Simon says
@psy-v
@psy-v Жыл бұрын
His photograph is now in the dictionary under the definition of "n+1"
@raynardhymen2139
@raynardhymen2139 Жыл бұрын
Still not enough
@evo2542
@evo2542 Жыл бұрын
I feel like in order to bring out my full potential as a human, 80 years isn't enough. 200-300 years seems ideal. I doubt I'd wanna live for 1000 years but who knows.
@joshgroft5682
@joshgroft5682 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you on both points.
@Ilyak1986
@Ilyak1986 Жыл бұрын
Then I argue you should be the one with the agency to decide that, as opposed to say, aging.
@RandomWandrer
@RandomWandrer Жыл бұрын
I wonder if 1000 year old humans will be mentally stable....
@Zz7722zZ
@Zz7722zZ Жыл бұрын
Very important point. Most people will only fret over the possible effects of overpopulation, but I think extending human lifespans will have the opposite effect. In the long run human population would be likely to fall than to increased quality and quantity of life, and the ability to maximize human potential would lead to faster and greater technological progress and adaptations to solve the problems we face now.
@reachthezora1912
@reachthezora1912 Жыл бұрын
​​@@RandomWandrer 20 years humans right now are not so I don't think they would want to live 1000 years
@stanleykachuik2589
@stanleykachuik2589 Жыл бұрын
Just a couple months ago I read about the first successful use of crisper gene editing of disease in living patients. This could be used to reset hormonal production of the organs to allow ourselves to live youthful for longer. I'd take living like I'm 25 for 80 years over living for 150 years in a heartbeat.
@victorvale1015
@victorvale1015 Жыл бұрын
Is that the same as somatic gene therapy?
@michaelq92
@michaelq92 Жыл бұрын
@@victorvale1015 no it uses RNA to target a specific region to deliver a cutting enzyme to remove the part of DNA causing disease in the mutation. Somatic therapy aims to activate somatic (sleeping) cells that don't have a mutation. Both techniques are likely to be ineffective as actual therapy the former being significantly more effective in terms of research. It's not unlikely that effective therapy would involve modified virus but we don't build computational systems to figure that out because REASONS. Binary analysis is completely ineffective in other words you can't simplify an electronegative system based on position with computer that can't determine positions with electronegativity (feel free to read that as electromagnetic interaction on a molecular level).
@michaelq92
@michaelq92 Жыл бұрын
You can also just buy those hormones and have a doctor inject them into you but it's unlikely your body naturally slows down hormone production for no reason so it's more like live like your 25 until your fifty and shits so worn down you can barely move or think then age rapidly as your immune system functions normally to remove the broken pieces that you've been patching with chewing gum for the last 25 years. Or you know massive cancer activated in your late 30s instead of 70s
@ngantnier
@ngantnier Жыл бұрын
We've created mice which can be aged forward and backwards at will by giving them antibiotics. By reactivating the yamanaka factors and resetting the cells to a pluripotent state.
@jebes909090
@jebes909090 Жыл бұрын
What do you think the covid 'vaccinations' are. They are a world wide gene therapy test.
@felipefairbanks
@felipefairbanks Жыл бұрын
I was 11 minutes into the episode and was thinking "wasted the opportunity to talk about David Sinclair and the information theory of aging." Glad to be proven wrong. I'm really confident we will be able to be "amortals" (dying only if killed, not naturally). At least anyone below 40 should, because that gives at least another 30 years of scientific discoveries. and all that is really needed is to be able to turn aging back more than a year in the space of a year for eternal youth to be achievable.
@ikkezelf599
@ikkezelf599 Жыл бұрын
If your right about those 30 yrs and finding a anti die pill it absolutely wouldn't be beneficial for everybody under 40 it would be made so expensive that only a very small percentage would be able to pay for it. It would also be the end of mankind if 7 billion people all get to be a x amount years before being killed by murder or accident as i don't think people would all agree on not to have offspring. It would be even harder to find decent living space that is affordable (in the Netherlands you will be waiting if start looking today for ten years how would that look if this pill is realized? Am going to be extra careful with my flat from today i don't want to be looking 70 yrs for appartements 😉
@felipefairbanks
@felipefairbanks Жыл бұрын
@@ikkezelf599 about it being expensive: it wouldn't the marginal cost decreases as more people use it. to make the first unaging human, billions will be spent. the second, way less, the 3rd, even less. and governments all around the world would probably pay for it, because if you are young forever, you don't need to retire, you probably will get less sick... so the public spending on those things will go down way more than the cost of the therapy. as for we being all doomed if we live forever, I don't think so. first because the population growth has been decreasing for a while and is predicted to stop before 2050. if that is the case, less people dying would just help maintain the population size. and second because we will at some point by the end of this century, have space colonies either on mars, the moon or both. so it is a lot more space for people to occupy.
@ikkezelf599
@ikkezelf599 Жыл бұрын
@@felipefairbanks like Lamborghini cars you mean, as those are so cheap all can afford them now with that logic. And even if it where like i said all the people not dying would have the world into food issues housing on and on it goes. No they would keep it in exclusive circles with a contract added that wen you talk you would not getting your refills (that would also be done for sure why selling it ones if you could have the one top percentage of rich folks as eternal costumers i am sure Bezos would work like that and God knows there are many more people like him sadly.
@reinmarandi6174
@reinmarandi6174 Жыл бұрын
But.. Who wants to live forever? 😃
@baz1184
@baz1184 Жыл бұрын
@@reinmarandi6174 many people. If you don't then don't get the treatment. Don't complain about other people who do want to live forever.
@AddledMindInc
@AddledMindInc Жыл бұрын
I really want to be biologically immortal. I doubt I would kick around for more than a few thousand years at best, but I am so SO excited to see where our species is headed. We're on the edge of greatness and I want to know if we make it or break it.
@justsomekidthatsinfinitely7090
@justsomekidthatsinfinitely7090 Жыл бұрын
Same. I don’t know if this applies to you as well, but I’m not really afraid of death h, just disappointed about all the things I’ll miss out on
@Azamat421
@Azamat421 Жыл бұрын
Good joke we can't even save eearth
@craigpierce7996
@craigpierce7996 Жыл бұрын
Being a corporate slave for a thousand years doesn't sound too appealing to me. You can take my place...
@craigpierce7996
@craigpierce7996 Жыл бұрын
@@kevinkarlwurzelgaruti458 You truly have to be an "Earth Bound Soul" to wish that. Many are... Many more fear death. In any regard, as long as money is the world's governor, then it will be a hell hole. Your just describing temporary get-a-ways, but the majority of the time, you're working for the Man. I just wouldn't want to be negotiating, bartering or manipulating my way around the money maze for that time period. The normal lifespan is more than enough experience for me!
@thuranz2773
@thuranz2773 Жыл бұрын
Me too mate. Me too. Though probably want to be around for as long as I possibly can to experience and see as much as possible.
@thewb8329
@thewb8329 Жыл бұрын
My mother died at 95 with no diseases and was in fairly good health . She lost her appetite to eat and thirst to drink water or other fluids. She still had a strong will to live yet her body decided to slowly shut down. The hospice nurse said her circumstances were not uncommon.
@povijestpovijest9569
@povijestpovijest9569 Жыл бұрын
If she was healthy she wouldn't have died
@thewb8329
@thewb8329 Жыл бұрын
@@povijestpovijest9569 Actually probably died from old age if you count that as a disease. The doctor said there were no other causes for her loss of appetite and thirst. She was 95 after all.
@majuscule8883
@majuscule8883 Жыл бұрын
@@thewb8329 was she mentally concious? Could she speak, smile, recognize people while slowly dieing.
@thewb8329
@thewb8329 Жыл бұрын
@@majuscule8883 yes
@majuscule8883
@majuscule8883 Жыл бұрын
@@thewb8329 Seem like she lost the will to live. The brain is directly connected to the stomach, wish is considered a second brain, where gut bacterias thrive and take the role of neurones. At 95 you have a less thriving gut population and if you eat the wrong food, even less, therefore the gut abandon the brain. In the insect world, there are fungies that hijack the brain of insects, particularly ants. They manipulate and control the ant to give them a ride to a particular place where they can infect more ants. When they're done with the possessed ant, they make him bit hard on a leave until it die of starvation and dry. I believe that our gut bacterias are similar to the fungus, sometimes they want to leave the body and death of the host is the only door.
@diysecuritygear9594
@diysecuritygear9594 Жыл бұрын
Seriously, is the editing crew going for an award? I love it! I can't decide if your 155 beat per minute narration pace or the psychedelic imagery is better.
@billhudson7286
@billhudson7286 Жыл бұрын
I didn't like the presentation; previously I've enjoyed a straight narration with RELEVANT video clips.
@apathyguy8338
@apathyguy8338 Жыл бұрын
I don't know the stock scientist videos that I've seen 5000 times in 5,000 other videos didn't really do a lot to impress me.
@leroyjenkins2639
@leroyjenkins2639 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for explaining the life expectancy. I hate how some people actually think that most ancient people died in their 20s. It’s actually the insanely high infant mortality rate that skewed the average so much
@pirateluffy01
@pirateluffy01 Жыл бұрын
Same i actually thought our life expectancy is increasing (i know totally misleading)
@blacklyfe5543
@blacklyfe5543 11 ай бұрын
What is infant high mortality?
@pirateluffy01
@pirateluffy01 11 ай бұрын
@@blacklyfe5543 Children who d*e under 1 year old
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 Жыл бұрын
2:35 - Chapter 1 - The inescapable clutches of death 7:40 - Chapter 2 - Methuselarity 12:45 - Wrap up
@WolfCry791
@WolfCry791 Жыл бұрын
My issue with death isn't that it's inevitable; it's that we get a palty amount of time before that happens
@apathyguy8338
@apathyguy8338 Жыл бұрын
Personally I don't care how long I have to live as long as I get to take all of humanity with me when I go.
@theorangeoof926
@theorangeoof926 Жыл бұрын
@@apathyguy8338Ok little psychopath.
@NightLordddd
@NightLordddd Жыл бұрын
@@apathyguy8338 wtf
@danielwells1734
@danielwells1734 Жыл бұрын
@@apathyguy8338 do you also not have a high opinion of the species?
@lonnpton5239
@lonnpton5239 Жыл бұрын
The mom : *"Don't worry drinking alcool wont affect my child🥴."* _The child few years later :_ @@apathyguy8338
@benheisenberg2633
@benheisenberg2633 Жыл бұрын
I would LOVE to live 1000 years, there's so much world out there
@MuchCow9000
@MuchCow9000 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like hell. If you need 1000 years to do stuff than you need to go out more lol. I'm 30 and I've done so much that I'm already bored with the same
@sirclarkmarz
@sirclarkmarz Жыл бұрын
and who's going to pay for those Thousand Years
@AndrewManook
@AndrewManook Жыл бұрын
@@MuchCow9000 That's bs
@leroyjenkins0736
@leroyjenkins0736 Жыл бұрын
@@sirclarkmarz urself you can stil work if you're alive and you will only become better at it
@CasanovaPugilist147
@CasanovaPugilist147 Жыл бұрын
@@sirclarkmarz the middle class
@coppertopv365
@coppertopv365 Жыл бұрын
SIGN ME UP 1,000 years sounds good to me.
@ASlickNamedPimpback
@ASlickNamedPimpback 7 ай бұрын
"but what about when youre parents die" "what about all your family dying" "what about when all ur friends are gone" what do you think happens to seniors TODAY? sign me tf up for immortality cause nothin is changing otherwise
@amazoring8269
@amazoring8269 7 ай бұрын
@@ASlickNamedPimpbackyeah I mean bringing out my full potential as a human seems good to me.
@nuclearpugg
@nuclearpugg 22 күн бұрын
​@@ASlickNamedPimpbackAs someone who took special needs classes until highschool and hairline started receding at 17 I already feel like an outcast to society I would love to see how technology progresses in 1000 years. It's sad I won't be alive to see it
@dbadaddy7386
@dbadaddy7386 Жыл бұрын
I spoke to a couple of neuroscientists about a thought I had with the brain and long life spans. There was an episode of Dr Who in which a young woman was healed using an alien chip, but it inadvertently gave her immortality. However, her brain still had memory limits. After a few hundred years she started writing down her memories. She was still alive near the end of the universe, but of course all of her journals had long crumbled to dust. She remembered the Doctor because every day was a reminder of him, but she could really only keep a few hundred years of recent memory. Considering that every memory literally involves a change and growth in neurons, there's only so much room in the skull. Eventually the neuron density would be such that there would be crosstalk, creating what amounts to static in the brain, and after that brain damage because there's no more room. THe neuroscientists said that was basically correct, but it would take several hundred years. Also, much memory is stored in RNA, and again those molecules would break over time if not accessed regularly, plus there's only so much room. If we can't offload memories, then we're probably limited to several hundred years because the meat would have a problem.
@OntologicalShock777
@OntologicalShock777 Жыл бұрын
I never saw this show, but I have also thought the same about memory limits in our brain.
@cadenrolland5250
@cadenrolland5250 Жыл бұрын
So your first 100 years would be like your childhood, you'd have fond feelings but few concrete memories. Digitalizing them in videos would help, but 400 years later you'd still be like "Wow, I don't remember that, but I do remember that man, but I can't place the name or where from." It was your grandfather. "Oh yeah now I recall."
@ComedorDelrico
@ComedorDelrico Жыл бұрын
You'd just have to find a way to upload them to a computer. Could you imagine how weird it would be to not remember the first 100 years of your life but be able to look it up on a computer and read about your childhood as if it were someone else's biography?
@bigwooly8014
@bigwooly8014 Жыл бұрын
@Caden Rolland that is essentially how my brain works currently. Fond feelings, there are things I know but with zero detail. My recall on demand is broken. Only things I want to forget are stored in my brain. I can assure you, it's no way to live.
@rhov-anion
@rhov-anion Жыл бұрын
Brains are just like that, and I'm not sure it's important to remember everything. Would you WANT to remember million of years? Every humiliating moment, every trauma, every annoying next door neighbor? Recently I was trying to recall the last name of an old boyfriend. We dated when I was 15, then he moved way, and being before the internet, we simply lost touch. A friend mentioned him but couldn't recall his surname so she asked me, and I realized I had no idea anymore. I know it starts with an M, and it wasn't a weird last name (otherwise, I'd remember). This wasn't even that long ago, but two decades was enough time to erode the details from memories of someone I loved. Imagine all the random classmates I have literally no memory of now. (Now, if only I could completely forget my first boyfriend. He was abusive, so I'd love to block my memories of him!)
@kieferclarkf1674
@kieferclarkf1674 Жыл бұрын
Altered Carbon on Netflix had a good take on this. Being able to download your conscience into a new body when yours shuts down.
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr 2 ай бұрын
I like that idea. It would help a lot with the mental struggles of immortality and other things.
@spyoon_
@spyoon_ Ай бұрын
​@@JuanEnriqueFloresJrsee: SOMA
@SirAshford
@SirAshford Жыл бұрын
A new channel! I very much enjoy the theme on this one, and look forward to continuing to watch. Thanks Simon & crew!
@joshgroft5682
@joshgroft5682 Жыл бұрын
Agreed but needs more special effects and auditory stimuli 😃
@1984Phalanx
@1984Phalanx Жыл бұрын
I hope my year and a half old son will get to benefit from this.
@Classic_seeker
@Classic_seeker Ай бұрын
Imagine having a 1000 years of time to appreciate and fully explore life, 1000 years to sing, to dance, to drive, to fight, to play, to read and write, to learn and research, to love and to question. We’d be able to solve problems with greater results because the same people who started the research can also still be the same person to continue and discover the answers. With 1000 years families can stay together longer and form greater bonds and make for more memories than they previously could. 10th time great-grandparents could be there for the births of their 10th great grandchildren… it would be something out of this world!!
@twinphalanx4465
@twinphalanx4465 Жыл бұрын
It cannot be overstated. The magnitude of an impact ceasing aging would be. It really should be our main goal as a species because if we can fundamentally stop aging we can keep our best minds for all of time. Imagine if we had Einstein hawking Neil deGrasse Tyson I don't know everyone everyone throughout modern history that we could keep forever until some disease that we haven't gotten rid of like Alzheimer's takes them. We would see a golden age unimaginable
@dancegregorydance6933
@dancegregorydance6933 Жыл бұрын
Sure. Of course it poses problems such as over population, inversion of the age pyramid. honestly I think finding better treatment or even possibly cures for Alzheimer's and cancer would go increase the average length of life.
@twinphalanx4465
@twinphalanx4465 Жыл бұрын
@@dancegregorydance6933 yes but if the cure for aging is something we can create that eliminates humanitys largest issue, time. Think about where we'd be if all of the most intelligent people in our history were all still alive still in their respective fields, yes it causes new issues but we now have an indefinite amount of time together to work on a solution
@moritakaishida7963
@moritakaishida7963 Жыл бұрын
It would be horrible
@Jack-The-Gamer-
@Jack-The-Gamer- 10 ай бұрын
⁠@@dancegregorydance6933 Overpopulation is a non-issue. Every scientist working on making life multi-planetary just became immortal. Problem solved.
@Aconspiracyofravens1
@Aconspiracyofravens1 7 ай бұрын
@@dancegregorydance6933inverting the age pyramid would not be an issue if old people where not dependent
@marcusc9931
@marcusc9931 Жыл бұрын
My favourite SF approach to that was in Terry Pratchett's Strata - people could be de-aged through genetic engineering, so reliably in fact, that they based the value of their money on it, naming their currency "day" - but they didn't live forever because while a young person with centuries ahead of them would have all reasons to be careful, bored 300-year olds would inevitably start getting more reckless after some point.
@witext
@witext Жыл бұрын
There’s nothing I would love more than to live to be 1000 years old I have a major case of fear of missing out, and while I should work on myself to get rid of my FOMO, I would still love to see mars be terraformed and the earth heal
@NightBazaar
@NightBazaar 6 ай бұрын
I want to know what's going to happen in the future.
@stevenmora0017
@stevenmora0017 2 ай бұрын
but if If you know you have all the time in the universe to do things, would you really do them? Or would you just realize that there's no reason anymore?
@witext
@witext 2 ай бұрын
@@stevenmora0017 i don’t agree with the premise of that argument tho I don’t do things cuz I know I don’t have forever, I do & don’t do things because of the good for the people around me & myself I am studying rocket physics & tech not because I only have 70 years left but because I want to help humanity Just cuz I have forever doesn’t mean I wanna spend forever doing nothing, I also can’t afford to do nothing, I need to earn money & I’d like to earn money doing the thing I like
@stevenmora0017
@stevenmora0017 2 ай бұрын
@@witext I understand, but when we take things for granted, they lose value. When we are young and think we have all the time in the world, we see no reason to do anything. We don’t mind spending time with our parents because we have them at our fingertips and don’t feel that it is something special. I am not saying that endings are a motivation, but they are what give meaning to things. An eternal life may not be demotivating, boring, or unhappy, but it would be something empty. Time, money, our loved ones, our favorite activities-when everything is within reach, it becomes monotonous (believe me, I say this from my own experience). In the end, what most people are looking for is a purpose. What do we do if we fulfill the purpose we have found and still have decades, centuries, or even millennia ahead of us? Look for another one? That would take away from the special. Settling for the small pleasures of life? You’d have to be VERY hedonistic.
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr 2 ай бұрын
@witext Agreed
@erwinvb70
@erwinvb70 Жыл бұрын
1000 years.. as long as family and friends join.. I’m all for it. That would be enough to do and experience anything I would like to.
@Julia-v3p2x
@Julia-v3p2x 3 ай бұрын
What about friend's family? And friends of friend's family?
@Wreckz_Tea
@Wreckz_Tea Жыл бұрын
"Some think the first person to live to 1000 has already been born." Just goes to show not all scientists are created equal
@Novafro
@Novafro Жыл бұрын
Ok, the thumbnail of Ocelot from the MGS series, rendered in high res from someone on art station is literally what got my attention for this video. So, well done.
@boblangill6209
@boblangill6209 Жыл бұрын
The beginning discussion of the difference between life expectancy and life span was a good start, and one that is often overlooked. One thing your discussion overlooked was the Hayflick limit to the number of times cells can successfully divide. This has been consistently observed, not only in humans but other species. It varies for different species. Shortening of chromosome telomeres during normal cell division is the mechanism that produces the limit. One alternative to immortality that appears in science fiction is the ability to completely transfer a person's consciousness. This may be more likely than tweaking life's master blueprints. The probability I'll live to see either: I wont say it's zero, but it's mathematically next to nil.
@user-jy5qm8nc9m
@user-jy5qm8nc9m Жыл бұрын
How do whales, turtles and organisms that live for centuries manage the hayflick limit ?
@boblangill6209
@boblangill6209 Жыл бұрын
@@user-jy5qm8nc9m Data shows different limits for different species. Also, animals with slower metabolisms have a generally lower rate of cell division. The case of Henrietta Lacks appears to be a human exception to the limit, but I have not seen it mentioned in any articles explaining the Hayflick limit
@AngryReptileKeeper
@AngryReptileKeeper Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I _hope_ to die before any of this happens (if it's possible at all), because I don't want to have to live in the dystopian hell that would follow.
@boblangill6209
@boblangill6209 Жыл бұрын
@@AngryReptileKeeper Long life in a dystopian hell is unlikely. Futures portrayed with significant life extension usually show it as limited to the ultra-elite, who escape the other harshness of their society. That's all just guessing, at any rate.
@PLAN50
@PLAN50 21 күн бұрын
Life is just insanely unproductive. 0-18. Learning the basics. 18-25. Learning some more basics, doing university. 25-35. Learning the basics of the job. 40-60. Peak performance in skills. 60-70. Slowly degeneration 70-80. Retirement.
@Psychx_
@Psychx_ Жыл бұрын
Reactive oxygen species and the associated damages to tissues are just a small puzzle piece when it comes to aging. There are other processes too, like telomer shortening, which leads to cell senescence (no more cell division). Pools of stem cells do also get exhausted, which reduces the body's healing abilities, haematopoiesis (formation of blood and immune cells), the ability to maintain bone density, etc. There is also an increasing loss of the epigenome, which reduces the relative amount of differenciation (and hence suitability to a certain task) of different tissues during one's lifespan (the cells become more generic/similar to the state during embryonal development, minus the properties of stem cells) -> skin becomes thinner, organ function and efficiency decreases, …
@joshgroft5682
@joshgroft5682 Жыл бұрын
Your comment is well informed. I was just thinking that the quickest way to immortality is in the preservation of consciousness capable of surval in unsurvivable environments and circumstances. It must be programmed to travel infinitely, take root and re-evolve in alien environments, and enter or create baby universes with favorable developmental physics across enormous spans of time. In a sense, it must extend beyond the capabilities of bodies, because long lived bodies will eventually be destroyed by entropy and environmental if not universal collapse. Even if we cannot ensure survival of present consciousness we must see that others in our likeness come about. These likenesses must carry inherent epigenetic trajectories adaptively slated to evolve sustainably in protected environments relevant to physiological and technological maturation and civil progression.
@driftingdruid
@driftingdruid Жыл бұрын
is your point that we still have a lot more to figure out before we can induce extended, or eternal youth, in people, even with the stem cell-injection research that is talked about at the end of the video?
@Jack-The-Gamer-
@Jack-The-Gamer- 10 ай бұрын
Yes, but it’s good that we are to the point that we are isolating and identifying the individual components that make up aging. You don’t need to solve it all, just each one individually, one step at a time.
@robsquared2
@robsquared2 Жыл бұрын
We need to make Simon immortal, otherwise how will he be every channel on youtube?
@aliahope-wilson4449
@aliahope-wilson4449 Жыл бұрын
And clone him 🧐
@Not-Great-at-Gaming
@Not-Great-at-Gaming Жыл бұрын
KZbin is immortal, therefore Simon is immortal.
@JasonSmith-jv7wl
@JasonSmith-jv7wl Жыл бұрын
I just gotta point out that the naked mole rat and the galapagos tortoise are likely negligibly senescent, meaning that the tools via DNA is likely in our bodies already, we just have to find a way to activate them. It isn’t just jellyfish and hydras.
@apathyguy8338
@apathyguy8338 Жыл бұрын
Personally I hope they'll mess up and we all turn into cannibalistic monsters.
@obiwanshinobi87
@obiwanshinobi87 Жыл бұрын
@@apathyguy8338 so, zombies?
@gnznroses
@gnznroses Жыл бұрын
Came here to say this
@joshgroft5682
@joshgroft5682 Жыл бұрын
@@Anonymous-ld7je Hasn't China already done this?
@JJ-si4qh
@JJ-si4qh Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this!
@jimwalshonline9346
@jimwalshonline9346 Жыл бұрын
"Who wants to live forever? After the first hundred thousand years, you'd be climbing the walls..." - Isaac Asimov
@apathyguy8338
@apathyguy8338 Жыл бұрын
Unless you could do it in a torpor or sleep state. Wake up every decade check it out for a couple years and then go back down. It's pretty much the only way you would ever be able to encounter new things with enough frequency to make it worth sticking around.
@jebes909090
@jebes909090 Жыл бұрын
Clinical immortality doesnt mean living forever though, just that you wont die from getting old. You can still sneeze and have an aneurysm though. In fact, the longer you live, paradoxically, the more likely you are to die from some random cause.
@littleredpony6868
@littleredpony6868 Жыл бұрын
@@jebes909090 I did see the claim in another video (can’t remember which one) that if we were biologically immortal the average human lifespan would be around 6,000 years before we would die from some sort of accident
@jebes909090
@jebes909090 Жыл бұрын
@@littleredpony6868 I'd take it ;)
@tubalord3693
@tubalord3693 Жыл бұрын
How would you ever get bored? There’s so much in the universe that we don’t know about maybe this is just my scientist brain going but even Albert Einstein still have plans of scientific research he wanted to do when he died. No true scientist is ever done. They are always curious.
@DaVizzle_Bro
@DaVizzle_Bro Жыл бұрын
That elderly woman's ability to focus and listen to both the doctor talking to her and you on the computer screen is blowing my mind
@CashelOConnolly
@CashelOConnolly Жыл бұрын
Shouldn’t the discussion be how long can we increase quality of life not how long we live. My granny is 95 but for 15 years of those 95 years she gone through the hell of dementia. Sleeping nightmares,hallucinations when she was awake. Screaming in terror because she truly believes they are real. Not recognising her family,believing we’ve all been killed. I believe if you’d have asked my granny in her 70’s about quality of life or longevity she’d have chosen quality and happily died in her 70’s rather than face the horrors her 80’s and 90’s have brought her.
@არარსებული
@არარსებული Жыл бұрын
That's only a worry for the organ replacement route. With gene editing like what Dr. Sinclair is doing the whole reason you'd live longer is because you reverted to a younger state, meaning the same dementia risk as a 30 year old for example.
@AngryReptileKeeper
@AngryReptileKeeper Жыл бұрын
"I believe if you’d have asked my granny in her 70’s about quality of life or longevity she’d have chosen quality and happily died in her 70’s rather than face the horrors her 80’s and 90’s have brought her." Unfortunately, society has an obsession with quantity over quality, and is quite fond of ignoring the problems it causes.
@CashelOConnolly
@CashelOConnolly Жыл бұрын
@@AngryReptileKeeper you’re so right,it’s wrong and it’s heartbreaking 💔
@beebah90
@beebah90 Жыл бұрын
@@CashelOConnolly I understand what you mean. But if we can cure let's say dementia, cancer and heart disease, which everyone is for, the byproduct will be a longer life with better quality, since those are the leading causes of death for humans everywhere on earth.
@CashelOConnolly
@CashelOConnolly Жыл бұрын
@@beebah90 who’ll finance all these longer lives?
@reeses712300
@reeses712300 6 ай бұрын
My grandfather approaching 80 still working constantly and being told by his doctors that his health is perfect and he could easily live another 20-30 years gives me a great positive outlook on the possibility of the future. Who knows maybe 50 will be the next 20 very soon.
@elfymcelferton2187
@elfymcelferton2187 Жыл бұрын
Kevin, have you written every episode on this channel? I'm pretty sure you have, just double checking. It's all been mad excellent. Fun topics.
@MrMasterprocrastinat
@MrMasterprocrastinat Жыл бұрын
Credits say Kevin Jennings wrote this episode, and it was edited by Aspen Cho. With the sheer volume of videos we see Simon hosting, I would be very surprised if he even wrote a quarter of the content he's featured in. It seems to me to be a very efficient division of labor for the KZbin business model.
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin Жыл бұрын
Almost every episode. Universal translators was some sort of sponsored cross over and and learning Kung Fu like the matrix was someone else. I was the only writer on the channel until about a month ago or so, now it looks like there's two others though their stuff is still in the pipeline. I selfishly was hoping the channel would hit 100K subs while I was still the only writer.
@elfymcelferton2187
@elfymcelferton2187 Жыл бұрын
@@ThatWriterKevin Well, awesome work getting the channel on its feet. Simon owes it some promotion. And I'm with Brian May on immortality. Just sounds exhausting. 🤔
@hightierplayers2454
@hightierplayers2454 Жыл бұрын
I see a ton of people who can't wrap their heads around what this actually is. If you think old decrepit and bed-ridden is how these extended lives will be, you didn't learn anything from this video or this field (epigenetics).
@Robert-hz9bj
@Robert-hz9bj Жыл бұрын
This really is a fascinating field. I remember several years ago, learning about the Greenland Shark, a creature biologically as complex as other large organisms (like humans), but apparently capable of living around four centuries or more. It was particularly fascinating, since before that it was generally believed that the real limiting factor on biological age was organism complexity (i.e., why simple organisms like those freak jellyfish could potentially live so long, but creatures like humans and dogs couldn't), since more complex organisms have more "moving parts." These creatures seem to suggest otherwise (though I personally wouldn't want to live past like 200)...
@crukih7527
@crukih7527 Жыл бұрын
If memory serves, I believe the oldest greenland shark turned out to be 512. Although they have a much slower metabolism than we do, and that does seem to be linked to faster burnout
@christopherconnelly177
@christopherconnelly177 Ай бұрын
Hey man love your videos! I made a comment a while back that I couldn’t understand your pronunciation. Now I can understand every word you say. idk if this was on accident or not but if it is intentional I really appreciate it! Keep making awesome videos love ur fan Chris!
@aidankelley2696
@aidankelley2696 Жыл бұрын
a major issue with immortality is a lot of our internal body parts get damaged and wear out over time, and no longer work as they did before, like for example our heart and brain do not regenerate, its a reason why alzheimers and heart disease are such a major problem because these organs ware out, by getting strained/damaged and they can't repair themselves, if we want immortality, we need our body to constantly performing the same functions as it is in our 20s for the rest of our life, along with finding some way to stop organs from wearing out and being able to repensish damage organs back to their full ability, if we want this to be a reality
@baz1184
@baz1184 Жыл бұрын
Did you even watch the video? If we achieve biological immortality then we would be able to repair our bodies as easily as we did as a child, but forever. Our bodies would have both the ability and the resources to remain at peak youth perpetually.
@RandomWandrer
@RandomWandrer Жыл бұрын
The human body is incredible. With all our technology we cannot make a machine that will last more than 10 years (without part replacement). But the body keeps going and going. 100 years is a real gift. I would definitely go for quality years, over quantity.
@vladtheinhaler8940
@vladtheinhaler8940 Жыл бұрын
​@@RandomWandrer We actually can make machines that last longer without needing replacement or repair. The saying "'they don't make things like they use to" has some merit.
@SilverFan21k
@SilverFan21k Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this video! ❤ Love the Longevity topic
@bernieburton6520
@bernieburton6520 Жыл бұрын
Biologically, at best probably no more than 150-200 years. Now, genetic modification and cybernetic implants could probably extend that quite a bit. If you replace all the mortal flesh with easily replaced and upgraded mechanical parts, well, the limit is unknown.
@MyKharli
@MyKharli Жыл бұрын
I see no evidence for this .
@AmazingStoryDewd
@AmazingStoryDewd Жыл бұрын
Well it depends on the animal you are i suppose. Certain animals suck as tortoises, fish or some whales are already capable of living for centuries.
@jacobcultivates
@jacobcultivates 11 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Very enlightening when viewed through a different scope 🔆
@deanpetersen859
@deanpetersen859 Жыл бұрын
Epigenetics research has vast potential!!
@WingManFang1
@WingManFang1 Жыл бұрын
The problem with Biological immortality is that after approximately 500 years your mind would be maxed out on memories kinda like a computer running out of storage space and to unlock more you’d have to either have an accident…write down your memories and forget them, or go mentally insane and hope to eventually recover.
@FRuMMaGe
@FRuMMaGe Жыл бұрын
The frustrating thing about this is that if one of these breakthroughs happens during our lifetime it will almost certainly be reserved only for the super rich. We are alive at the first time in history where biological immortality seems plausible, but too early to actually participate in it ourselves. Imagine what future generations who have never known biological death think about the idea of a body just degrading and dying? The concept would be alien to them
@hollownation
@hollownation Жыл бұрын
What you don’t think the government would want people going to work and paying taxes for 800 years?
@YTCensorshipFindTheCure
@YTCensorshipFindTheCure Жыл бұрын
It will just make them a target then. I think maybe it could be like Altered Carbon in the future, where their bodies are just sleeves they call them.
@horrortackleharry
@horrortackleharry Жыл бұрын
There's been a million and one things that people claimed would 'only be reserved for the super-rich'. I assure you that if it happens, clinics in Vietnam and Bulgaria will clone the tech and offer it for a few hundred dollars within 5 years.
@MentalBrothers
@MentalBrothers Жыл бұрын
@@hollownation Well, not when the goverment needs to wage wars to annihilate entire populations to get new aggriculture land to feed their population that wont die. Or I guess they would, But once they repopulate those lands, and still face the problem of sustaining an insane population, unless we also figure out how to travel to other solar systems and populate other plantes I dont see how Immortality will do more good then bad ^^
@grantsigmon
@grantsigmon Жыл бұрын
Lots of money would be saved keeping people out of assisted living/ hospitals, and like the other comment said, people would add labor for 100s of years, offsetting the cost.
@JackMyersPhotography
@JackMyersPhotography Жыл бұрын
NMN as a precursor to NAD+ has helped me with energy levels. David Sinclair has some interesting things to say about it.
@red_adept
@red_adept Жыл бұрын
My, albeit limited, understanding is that hard age limits are set by telomere lengths. That cells can only divide so many times, and once their telomeres run out, the cells can no longer undergo mitosis.
@paulxaviercyr
@paulxaviercyr Жыл бұрын
Exactly how I understand the process as well... "The Hayflick Limit" The copy machine basically runs out of toner.
@Novastar.SaberCombat
@Novastar.SaberCombat Жыл бұрын
At a certain point, nearly every organic aspect of a human would need to be replaced with something else. Augmentations of mechanics, electronics, or a combination of the two. Even then, nothing lasts forever. Perhaps with exception to Diamond. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨
@AngryReptileKeeper
@AngryReptileKeeper Жыл бұрын
@@Novastar.SaberCombat "At a certain point, nearly every organic aspect of a human would need to be replaced with something else. " And at that point, you would cease to be you. You would cease to be _human._ You'd become just another product, an object.
@miguelfonseca1104
@miguelfonseca1104 Жыл бұрын
what about telomerase?
@PatternShift
@PatternShift Жыл бұрын
Cancer is at the root: the loss of cohesion between cells and purposes and disintegration or an organism into its constituent parts. Regrowth and regeneration would be the key to dramatic increases in longevity, but the more growth you have the more exposure to cancer risk you have - unless you can mitigate that risk significantly. Large organisms have more tumor suppressors and fewer oncogenes. If you can keep cancer in check indefinitely, then that could unlock extended rejuvenation. We can’t create real life from scratch yet, and we have a long way to go. But biological analysis and modeling has grown faster than Moore’s law for computation in the last two decades, it’s hard to predict what it will unlock, especially with machine learning and classic AI methods being pointed at this unprecedented volume of data.
@red_adept
@red_adept Жыл бұрын
Size seems to be the secret to conquering cancer. Whales for example seem to experience cancer at a similar rate to humans, but the sheer amount of their cells seems to be the reason they don't suffer from it, as given enough time, cancer sets into the cancerous regions and it essentially burns itself out.
@PatternShift
@PatternShift Жыл бұрын
@@red_adept one path among many, though. Consider bats, which live more than 10x as long as mice. Because they don't have many predators, their genome has been selectively enriched for molecular mechanisms: dna damage repair, autophagy, altered immune responses and inflammation. And unlike humans or whales, no slowed metabolic activity, instead they've evolved to handle the oxidative stress of flying, which implies chronically high metabolic load. So "make humans bigger" is tough, but genetic modifications or medicines derived from understanding the molecular mechanisms of bat longevity could theoretically 10x human lifespan.
@Psychx_
@Psychx_ Жыл бұрын
@@PatternShift Bats have a crazy active immune system and a relatively high body temperature. IIRC the metabolic and oxidative stress stems from this, not the ability to fly. Btw, what you are referring to as "loss of cohesion between cells and purposes" is known and studied as "loss of cell differenciation" or the "loss of the epigenome". I.e. nerve cells and skin cells are have the same ancestorial line of cells (exoderm). During embryogenesis, the cells sense where they are in the body and which tissue to form according to their neighbours. Then, they differentiate into skin stem cells, nerve stem cells and these differenciate further into the cells that make up the bulk of a specific tissue. During normal aging, they kinda forget this (epi-)genetic imprint that tells them which tissue to be, leading to a slow decline of function and efficiency. Sometimes, shit hits the fan and they reacquire stem cell properties while deactivating their apoptosis pathways -> cancer.
@PatternShift
@PatternShift Жыл бұрын
@@Psychx_ Re: bats, you've got causation backwards. Look at other high temp animals: mostly birds. The highest base body temp in the animal world is the hummingbird. Bats are a mammalian outlier. Once peak temperatures and metabolic stress can't be compromised b/c flying, other adaptations that accommodate this are selected along with it as a package. Adaptations that come later are against the combined package. Also, I work in cancer research. What you've outlined is not wrong, but one particular story, not the entire tumorigenesis path. DNA damage and somatic mutation is the most common shared feature among cancers, and most cancers have predictable somatic mutations and a population of cells that all descend from a single clonal line. This is why certain environmental factors (radiation is an obvious one) are carcinogens. But even that is not one path, it's multi-hit, usually factors combine: environmental stress, failure of dna repair mechanism, failure of immune system to infiltrate and kill tumor cells, etc.
@uncletrashero
@uncletrashero Жыл бұрын
cancer needs to be PREVENTED more than it needs to be cured. medicine is focusing too much on the wrong end of the problem
@beagleissleeping5359
@beagleissleeping5359 Жыл бұрын
That episode of The Golden Girls. Cant remember the exact numbers but Rose's boyfriend was upset because he said his doctor told him he could live to 100. What's wrong with that? I'm only budgeted to live until 85!
@billyalarie929
@billyalarie929 Жыл бұрын
That Batman joke made me utterly burst into laughter
@skyelerschmidt4236
@skyelerschmidt4236 Жыл бұрын
I’m 13 turning 14 on November 17 2023 so I don’t know how long I’ll live hopefully a king and fulfilling life
@hertzwave8001
@hertzwave8001 8 ай бұрын
This user was never seen again.
@deezburr
@deezburr 5 ай бұрын
baby
@controlfreak1963
@controlfreak1963 Ай бұрын
I don't believe a word of it. We have kept people living much longer but at what price? Cancer, Alzheimer's, Dementia, cartilage failure, the list goes on. We need to cure a ton of diseases first and then we have to worry about structural failure of our bones and joints. In addition, our cells are not designed to replicate for 1000 years so how do you resolve the eventual DNA failures?
@raybod1775
@raybod1775 Жыл бұрын
I’m an elderly retired person and alive thanks to modern medicine, along with most of my friends… organs fail, joints wear out, infections and diseases occur, as well as mental and general physical decline. There will be no single cure all for aging.
@SavantApostle
@SavantApostle Жыл бұрын
Yeah who wants to live for ever with dementia
@Novastar.SaberCombat
@Novastar.SaberCombat Жыл бұрын
I've been hoping for death to come sooner rather than later. But not until EOY, 2026. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨
@theorangeoof926
@theorangeoof926 Жыл бұрын
@@Novastar.SaberCombatWhy hope for death after that date?
@mangoesfly1594
@mangoesfly1594 Жыл бұрын
@@theorangeoof926 its probably best not to pursue that conversation lol
@DayonBledsoe2000
@DayonBledsoe2000 Жыл бұрын
@@Novastar.SaberCombateoy?
@clayongunzelle9555
@clayongunzelle9555 Жыл бұрын
You have to do a video about the tractor beam, staple of science fiction but doesn't seem possible in any way
@Montie-Adkins
@Montie-Adkins Жыл бұрын
Aubrey de Grey started a new foundation which is now performing a 1000 mice experiment using multiple items. Some mice will use one item, others will have combinations, others will be given everything, and there will be a control group. They will use rapamycin, mTERT, stem cells, and senolytics. And they will use older mice in part to shorten the experiment time.
@user-jy5qm8nc9m
@user-jy5qm8nc9m Жыл бұрын
That's a brilliant idea, I wonder if the mocr who use everything will get the longest lifespan
@maximmura4234
@maximmura4234 Жыл бұрын
Simon, have you discovered by any chance a degree in mathematics with any of your writers? If so, a human approachable explanation of Lenia might be an interesting topic to cover for this channel
@Paul-ou1rx
@Paul-ou1rx Жыл бұрын
The funny thing is, if humans lived on average 1000 years and aged appropriately, they would still say "Life is short, enjoy it while you can."
@stellad7315
@stellad7315 Жыл бұрын
It is short but life is really short at the moment.
@dudeatmenangle
@dudeatmenangle Жыл бұрын
That is your best video yet, very funny and informative.
@Orlyy
@Orlyy Жыл бұрын
The most amazing thing is the fact that David believes it's too late in his life to see extension, but he's doing the research regardless.
@rgonzalo511
@rgonzalo511 Жыл бұрын
Well that's not good, causs it means he isn't really going to try that hard
@nicholasharvey1232
@nicholasharvey1232 Жыл бұрын
You can outrun the Grim Reaper in the short term, but you'll eventually get slower and slower until he inevitably catches you.
@wolfiemuse
@wolfiemuse Жыл бұрын
Wait what? ANOTHER Simon Whistler channel??? I didn’t even know this one existed!!
@drewrubtheMando
@drewrubtheMando Жыл бұрын
The Netflix series Altered Carbon is a good insight alas to why I would never want immortality. Or even longevity.
@mortophobegaming6454
@mortophobegaming6454 Жыл бұрын
All the popular media depict grotesque distopia's involving immortality. It is as if living longer is such an unattainable goal. The very idea is vilified throughout history, to ease the mind off the fear of mortality. A psychological self help trick that used to make sense, but no more. Btw i love altered carbon :3
@LordofSyn
@LordofSyn Жыл бұрын
5:50 Was not expecting that. Well done.
@stevefranklin9176
@stevefranklin9176 Жыл бұрын
The question is how is Rupert Murdoch still alive and when the hell will he pass on.
@patrickbrumm420
@patrickbrumm420 Жыл бұрын
production value has really made some amazing headway! The footage of the woman holding the mouse up by the tail and slowly bringing in the needle was funny
@LambentLark
@LambentLark Жыл бұрын
My grandma lived to be 100+ yo. At the end she said that death held no fear for her anymore. She said she felt like an old clock with a stretched spring that had been over wound too many times. The world no longer made much sense and she was looking forward to the peace. I think only the young want to live forever.
@AngryReptileKeeper
@AngryReptileKeeper Жыл бұрын
"I think only the young want to live forever." Bingo. I've never heard a single elderly person wish to live longer, nor for immortality. I've only ever heard it from the young and naïve.
@Mohamed58290
@Mohamed58290 Ай бұрын
I hope they do this before i die 😭 Imagine dying and the next day they unlock the secret to immortality
@nuclearpugg
@nuclearpugg 22 күн бұрын
Considering even now close to 2025 living to 100 years seems very optimistic and worn down we will probably be lucky to even get 200 years I hope I'm wrong though
@DarkWarchieff
@DarkWarchieff Жыл бұрын
Simon, how about an episode about a interface for your body? Just disable the adrenal glands for a bit if you got anxiety as if it were a computer process.
@birdmonster115
@birdmonster115 Жыл бұрын
That technology already exists. It's called drugs
@michaelq92
@michaelq92 Жыл бұрын
Yeah because chemicals in your brain are so simple you can manipulate one for the exact result your expecting.
@DarkWarchieff
@DarkWarchieff Жыл бұрын
@@michaelq92 next to teleportation and mind upload it's a very tame one.
@DarkWarchieff
@DarkWarchieff Жыл бұрын
@@birdmonster115 got deadly side effects 0/10 would not recommend Krokodil.
@michaelq92
@michaelq92 Жыл бұрын
@@DarkWarchieff no it's not adrenaline is a hormone they have extremely complicated interaction we understand little about.
@PTQ4Q4Q4Q4
@PTQ4Q4Q4Q4 Жыл бұрын
We are close very close to easily living past 100 years and being healthy,
@MikeIsCannonFodder
@MikeIsCannonFodder Жыл бұрын
I've always thought it odd that child mortality were included in life expectancy numbers. When I think of life expectancy, I think it's how old adults are likely to get. Said another way, when I think life expectancy, I would expect there to be very few people, relatively speaking, older than that age. Feels like one of those things where the formal definition and the general understanding don't line up.
@surferdude4487
@surferdude4487 Жыл бұрын
"Average" life expectancy, by definition, would have to include all people. Babies are people too.
@tamsenmillerbaum
@tamsenmillerbaum Жыл бұрын
I've always understood it. That is the way the taught it in school.
@madarchmage1151
@madarchmage1151 Жыл бұрын
I like this. Thank you
@Graybeard_
@Graybeard_ Жыл бұрын
A primary question we should ask ourselves is: Is our life so incredibly fantastic that we would like to keep living it for another 200 years? I've had a blast, but I'm looking forward more to what comes after. I think it is likely that this is just a classroom. I have no desire to stay after class.
@ProgrammedForDamage
@ProgrammedForDamage Жыл бұрын
My dad is 73 and he said he could die tomorrow and would be perfectly happy. I was shocked, and asked him why, and he said "I've done everything I ever wanted to do."
@juswolf22
@juswolf22 Жыл бұрын
Amen brother.
@aimilios439
@aimilios439 Жыл бұрын
"What comes after." That's why we atheists are so miserable, this is all we have with no apparent motive...
@Graybeard_
@Graybeard_ Жыл бұрын
@@aimilios439 Atheism is a belief system. There is no proof that there is nothing more than this reality. Anyone who claims to "know" that there is nothing more is holding onto a belief system, just like all the religions, but without all the symbolism, rituals and indoctrination. It still requires belief. For me personally, agnostic is more logical, no belief, but open to what may be out there that we don't know about. I have always led my life as an open-minded skeptic. I don't get caught up in things, and I don't feel miserable. In terms of "motive," I accept that there may be nothing beyond this life, but I live my life as though there is. I wake up each morning and recommit to being the best person that I can be. Each night I review and accept how my day went. I always seek out fun and laughter and don't take life or myself too seriously.
@ultrafly100
@ultrafly100 Жыл бұрын
Another 200 years? Give me at least a full 2000 years and then we’ll talk.
@SilverFan21k
@SilverFan21k 9 ай бұрын
Awesome video
@Aegirak
@Aegirak Жыл бұрын
The reason we die at a certain age is simply because of cell replication. Every time a cell dies, a replication of that cell is created. Problem with cell replication is cell degradation. The copy of a copy isn’t as perfect as the original. So make more copies you have more errors in the cells and eventually the cells will fail and die.
@AngryReptileKeeper
@AngryReptileKeeper Жыл бұрын
Eventually, the whole system becomes irreparably corrupted.
@rougeomen7649
@rougeomen7649 Жыл бұрын
DNA replacement and augmentation. We are discovering how our genome works and how to tweak adult dna. Your basic frame has already been built, and as your dna accepts subtle changes over several Decades you can have an entirely new set of DNA. Improve, replace, longevity.
@MC-gj8fg
@MC-gj8fg Жыл бұрын
You can't live forever as a matter of statistical inevitability even if we became biologically immortal. Every day there is a very small but non negligible chance of meeting with misadventure. So, even if we never aged, on average, after 1000 years it's likely that at some point a piano would fall on your head or something. It's just a matter of time. Over a long enough period even very rare events become inevitable.
@omarcomming722
@omarcomming722 Жыл бұрын
...of course you would die eventually from something, how is being killed by a falling piano relevant to extending the natural life expectancy?
@ctakitimu
@ctakitimu Жыл бұрын
@@omarcomming722 Seeing as you're being pedantic, it doesn't but the video is about life span, not expectancy. The average life span is effected by events too
@glennmartin6492
@glennmartin6492 Жыл бұрын
This is what I want to know. If you can eliminate disease, aging and cancer what is the statistically likely lifespan before an accident kills you?
@omarcomming722
@omarcomming722 Жыл бұрын
@@ctakitimu I'm not being pendantic but no one can have any influence on life events so they aren't really relevant to the discussion because it's clearly centered on the medical aspect of extending our natural life span. Although I would say that just increasing our life span is pointless and even negative unless it implies extending our youth and staying young for most of our life. No one wants to live to 500 if they keep deteriorating physically and looking like shit.
@ctakitimu
@ctakitimu Жыл бұрын
@@omarcomming722 Yeah agreed. I wouldn't want to live as an old man for a really long time.
@ThunderGod9182
@ThunderGod9182 Ай бұрын
You could just eat a ketogenic diet (which is the proper human diet FYI) and live to 120 to 150 years, let the chips fall where they may.
@joemagnus5085
@joemagnus5085 Жыл бұрын
I know this topic is dear to Simon lol. I was surprised that there was no mention of teleomeres or nanotechnology
@vennom14
@vennom14 Жыл бұрын
Your stock footage is amazing
@P_Mann
@P_Mann Жыл бұрын
The unfortunate thing about much of the genetic extension research, from what I understand, is that it would generally only apply to those who receive the treatment as embryos. There isn’t yet an effective way to send a DNA “patch/update” to every cell in a mature human body. I hope it comes around in my lifetime, however, because I’m excited to see how society deals with the consequences of functional immortality.
@haydenscholze7452
@haydenscholze7452 11 ай бұрын
That is true for current technology, however, we are already researching vectors(e.g. viruses) that can be used as a medium for genomic-wide editing of the entire organism. Of course, there is more risk then embryo editing, but it is definitely a possibility in the future.
@andromidius
@andromidius Жыл бұрын
I'll just be happy to reach 60 (currently 37). Reason for this? I'm trans. I'm already on the older side of the average (globally) due to violence, medical neglect and societal pressures. If I ever reach retirement age (currently 64, though who knows what it'll be in twenty seven years) then I'll count myself especially privileged. So many of my siblings even reach thirty, and most of our elders transitioned later in life (due to how relatively recent even the inadequate trans acceptance in society is, any transitioned folk who began treatment before the 1990's is relatively rare by today's numbers). So yeah, the numbers are a bit squiffy due to the complications involved in how to measure our average lifespans (example, do we include people who transitioned in later life or people who grew up with wealth and safety, or just the most vulnerable subgroup of trans folk - such as Latin American sex workers, who seem to rarely make it to age 25 due to the sheer scale of violence?) it is an indication that there's a lot of room for improvement. We're human too, so it would be nice if we compared reasonably close to our cis siblings.
@SSJfraz
@SSJfraz Жыл бұрын
Depends what you regard as "life". We can continue to replace parts of ourselves with bionics, which keeps our body alive, along with a backup of all of our thoughts, memories, personality traits etc. But there must be a point where that inner sense of awareness or "soul", simply dies off. You become a walking, talking copy of yourself, but the real you is long dead.
@HollieMoodie
@HollieMoodie Жыл бұрын
What would be the point at that point?
@ifrit1937
@ifrit1937 Жыл бұрын
Eh the issue with your comment is you assume that the "Soul" is the thing that allows us to think/have the personality we have now...for all we know the "Soul" may be nothing more than energy that our body uses as a power source while our personality (basically what makes each individual who they are) could be a result based off how our individual brains are wired, which if so means the moment you die you're just gone plain and simple (well your personality anyway) and all that's left is the energy/soul that's left over. Ya you can hope there's a heaven or god after death but it could just as easily be a Santa Clause story in the end as well used to calm people down a the thought of ceasing to exist in any way once dead.
@aimilios439
@aimilios439 Жыл бұрын
There is no indication of a soul. Also, there is a point your past self is now dead, and you have replaced their body and have a copy of their memories. And in the future, you'll be long dead before your inherited body decays with the last copy of you inside. Not too different from the bionic perspective.
@miguelfonseca1104
@miguelfonseca1104 Жыл бұрын
why? if the soul is akin to a symphony, the replacing of all inddividual instruments over time does not make the music stop
@viperswhip
@viperswhip Жыл бұрын
What is life? If I get uploaded into a computer, I don't even care. Dr. Sinclair is pretty good at presentation as well, a great ambassador for this science.
@ERKNEES2
@ERKNEES2 Жыл бұрын
I love how the doctor and the patient were watching fact boy on the laptop in the office
@theonlineanimal6009
@theonlineanimal6009 Жыл бұрын
We are born. We live. And then we die. I love life. I'm greatful for every day I breath. But I think wanting to live forever is selfish. Nothing wrong with dying.
@albuharimuslimmuslim
@albuharimuslimmuslim 4 ай бұрын
I NEED TO SEE THE WORLD
@MentalBrothers
@MentalBrothers Жыл бұрын
I wonder what would happen if we became immortal. Or live 500% longer. Like, Resource wise. Pretty sure we need to expand our physical horizon alongside making this leap in technology. Not to mention the ethics around it. Who would be able and who would not if our horizon is not expanded, because there would have to be rules implemented to limit how many could live forever. Like China's 1 Child rule would probably not come near the reality of what would unfold if this happens ^^
@fireking840
@fireking840 Жыл бұрын
When I think about long life...200+yrs, the first thing that comes to mind is...over population. Seems to me that would be the price to pay for long life or immortality for vast majority. Same concept with the whole religious deal of after armageddon and living forever on earth...like come on....the earth is but so big..and it can only sustain but so many people and other life. Could many cultures that believe in having having 2, 3, 4 or more kids is a must or normal be ok with being told....you can only have one and it must be approved? 3 people died in a car accident...so 3 families are allowed to have one child each. It would be interesting to see how all this would play out should longevity be achieved.
@MentalBrothers
@MentalBrothers Жыл бұрын
@@fireking840 Indeed it would be really interesting to see how this turned out. I mean one obvious first wave thing would be limited to the richest of the rich. But what unfolds after is up for debate!
@miguelfonseca1104
@miguelfonseca1104 Жыл бұрын
as it is populatin growth has halted in the west, it woudnt be a major problem
@vladtheinhaler8940
@vladtheinhaler8940 Жыл бұрын
​@@miguelfonseca1104 Population growth hasn't flat lined in the West. The county with the fastest decline in population is China, which is estimated to lose half a billion people by the end of this Century.
@neilgoodman2885
@neilgoodman2885 Ай бұрын
Fascinating!
@benjamindover2601
@benjamindover2601 Жыл бұрын
I've only been alive for 26 years and I'm already over it, 1000 years sounds like hell.
@mortophobegaming6454
@mortophobegaming6454 Жыл бұрын
Indeed, way too short
@bobriggins8862
@bobriggins8862 Жыл бұрын
Only went up 11 yrs from 1950 to 2019. Actually went back down 2.6 yrs as of 2021.
@scottwilson4149
@scottwilson4149 Жыл бұрын
In an undergraduate genetics class in 1983, we were told that the cells of our organs are able to divide a predetermined number of times, depending on our heredity. As we age, our organs replenish their tissues more slowly and eventually stop. This is when our hair turns grey, our skin grows fragile, and our bodies wear out. I don't know if this is still considered a factor. I love all of your shows, Simon. Very informative and thought-provoking. You are especially engaging.
@eds1445
@eds1445 Жыл бұрын
That is mostly correct. However, we also have a group of cells in every tissue that are known as stem cells which have the ability to divide a near infinite amount of times). These cells form the parenchymal (functional) cells and the structure of an organ (imagine it like the fundament of an organ). If we were able to promote more sustainable stem cell growth, they would be able to replenish the cells of a tissue, decreasing the possibility of disease, organ failure and senescence.
@BeeFilling-gx2hg
@BeeFilling-gx2hg 7 ай бұрын
Concept of living forever means that you can forget the terrifying definition of insanity. To hide the brutality truth behind “forever” but to also choose your own time or way out of that loop “forever” become nothing, feel nothing. Your world ends there. Emotion, sensation, thoughts, everything taken from what human brain can process. So either way we’re stuck in a state of infinity forever dead or alive. I’d choose to live even if black holes are what left of the universe. Another solar system made by man would be created. And I am all for it. For science.
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr
@JuanEnriqueFloresJr 2 ай бұрын
Agreed
@geodesicdeath6793
@geodesicdeath6793 Жыл бұрын
It would have been neat to talk about the marriage between advancement in biological ability to live longer and the probabilities of unlikely things happening to end life. This would also put a limit on how long someone could live.
@icecold9511
@icecold9511 Жыл бұрын
My first thought. Every day is a game of Russian roulette with an accident or something. Grim Reaper only has to get one bang in that game.
@renard6012
@renard6012 Жыл бұрын
I assume there is a certain number of airplane flights or car trips one must take in which there is a 100% probability of at least one fatal accident happening... What is that number? I want to do the math, but I am lazy, and failed statistics. Eyeballing it, I'd say... 500,000 flights? About 300,000 car trips? Point is, you are correct. With a long enough lifespan, a fatal accident of any kind is guaranteed to happen.
@SadiaShiraazi-ee1dl
@SadiaShiraazi-ee1dl 5 ай бұрын
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم الحمدلله الذى بنعمته تتم الصالحات عليه افضل الصلاة والسلام
@asvt321
@asvt321 3 ай бұрын
Amen
@QBCPerdition
@QBCPerdition Жыл бұрын
If people could live forever, and remain healthy, then it would have a huge impact on the workforce. We'd probably need to institute some sort of intermittent retirement. Someone works for 40 years and then gets 20 years of retirement, then works 40 years again. Otherwise, while I would absolutely be willing to work forever in order to love forever, my kids might find it hard to get a job, and the thought of working forever is not, exactly, my idea of the ideal life.
@MrAndrew941
@MrAndrew941 Жыл бұрын
What makes you think automation wouldn’t free people of work and then people can focus on things like deep thought and creativity and science, it’s the reason such great thinking came from Greece, most Greek citizens didn’t work back in the day, unfortunately they achieved it through slavery but it’s proof an economy could work and will be more productive if people didn’t have to focus on work and could focus on higher thinking instead.
@ImTHECarlos98
@ImTHECarlos98 Жыл бұрын
It really depends if this longevity would extend to our good/healthy years. If all we get is an extra 400 years of seniority and poor health, what’s the point?
@TheInsaneupsdriver
@TheInsaneupsdriver Жыл бұрын
the opposite would happen, as the population numbers rise, so does the workforce and the need for experienced people. this would have the secondary effect of those with specialties in things like science and medical with 100+ years experience. people would be able to work on projects that would take a century or two, things like fusion would've happened allot sooner. teleportation, space fold technology, would all be within reach cause you would've have people required to hand off projects losing knowledge and expertise in the process. for example, the Apollo mission engines can't be remade cause all the people who made them are dead and no one knows how they did it, so they all had to start from scratch. that's by Boeing is having problems with their rocket to the moon. If "again" those behind that project were still working now, we would've colonized mars by now.
@The1stDukeDroklar
@The1stDukeDroklar Жыл бұрын
@@MrAndrew941 Same point I was going to make.
@QBCPerdition
@QBCPerdition Жыл бұрын
@@ImTHECarlos98 Exactly. If it extends our lives but not quality life, then it's just a drain on resources for no real gain.
@D_Chess
@D_Chess Жыл бұрын
"...or possibly a hydra." I love how Simon so casually threw that in and moved on lol
@ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
@ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958 Жыл бұрын
My parents are 93 and 94. They still suck air and even talk. Neither one knows what I said to them two minutes ago. My dad is hell-bent on losing everything he has ever earned during his life by making himself the victim of one fraud after another. He still drives and yells louder and louder every time anyone suggests he give up his license of let someone else handle his finances. Living beyond 90 is a serious mistake. They should have a service center like the one in Soylent Green where families bring their aging relatives to be recycled.
@BenjaminCronce
@BenjaminCronce Жыл бұрын
So many 90-100 people in my family that are still very mentally fast. When my mom was a child, 80 yo aunt arm-wrestling the 20 y/o men at weddings and winning most the of time. My 80 y/o uncle runs miles per day and is ripped. Had a great aunt who lived on her own at the age of 102, even did the house repairs and kept everything looking nice all on her own. Gotta keep moving and using your brain. Seeing all of the 70-80s family members that are physically stronger, even the women, than I ever was is my motivation for exercising. They have so much energy.
@lucrtrvl
@lucrtrvl 11 ай бұрын
What’s with the annoying background music? Can you remote it please. That would greatly improve the quality of you very interesting video. Tx for your good work!
@KyleDB150
@KyleDB150 Жыл бұрын
I think you forgot though: that current life expectancy is defined for people born today, e.g. if its increased by 20 years it doesn't mean that currently old people are expected to live 20 years longer, there's a significant delay, which could be enough that improvement does need to be exponential to allow "immortality"
@mortophobegaming6454
@mortophobegaming6454 Жыл бұрын
Plottwist: those life extending therapies, even genetic modification ones, can be applied in living humans. Nit only can aging factors be eliminated "from design" in embryos, in existing humans aging can actually be reversed. That is the major difference between living longer by higher health and wealth standards, and anti aging technologies
@Ahtraihue
@Ahtraihue Жыл бұрын
Comments for the algorithm skulls for the skull throne
@tomholroyd7519
@tomholroyd7519 Жыл бұрын
"How you become Batman."🦇
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