QUOTE (mars20 @ Apr 15 2017, 09:06 PM)
QUOTE (iamgroot(not) @ Apr 15 2017, 08:00 PM)
QUOTE (Futurist @ Apr 15 2017, 05:40 PM)
QUOTE (davzar @ Apr 15 2017, 11:15 AM)
Unfortunately it's true...
https://www.google.it/amp/www.lastampa.it/2...pagina.amp.html
Right now I'm speechless, forever in my

Emma
May she RIP.
Indeed, she lived very long and advanced very far--specifically living to age 117.4.
Frankly, Mrs. Morano will certainly be extremely strongly missed by all of us.
Also, out of curiosity--what exactly was her cause of death? Does anyone here know?
Old age
No one dies of old age, not even 117-year-olds. Old age is not a scientifically recognized cause of death. People die of diseases that occur in old age, not old age itself.[Quote\]
That's 100% wrong. That's an old fallacy borne of the false notion that "Western" medicine can "cure" or "repair" anything, and a misunderstanding of the maximum human lifespan and what aging really is.
Actually, the mindset is beginning to shift, to understand that "old age" is, in fact, a cause of death in many instances.
http://reason.com/archives/2016/12/02/time...disease-and-get
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.vie...nother-Disease/
I'm not trying to be rude.
But paradigm shifts in science can take many years.
Scientists once said that continents didn't drift (WRONG) and that the moon's craters were not caused by impacts (WRONG).
It takes some time for old ideas to be overturned, but based on the FACTS, to say that one cannot die of "old age" is to not understand what "aging" is, to not understand what aging does to one's body.
Aging is a cause of death, yes it is.