dipole said:
But a cure for ageing is actually plausible. There are many known examples in nature of organisms which do not age. Naked mole rats show far less symptoms of ageing than most mammals, and are almost immune to cancer and other ageing-related diseases. Ageing is not required by the second law of thermodynamics, but is a biological process than can be altered.
All humans have at least a few cells that are cancering at any given moment throughout life. The different diseases where 'cancer' becomes difficult to manage develop under certain conditions. The probability of those conditions occurring increase throughout life. The 2nd law of thermodynamics doesn't apply to organisms, cells are not closed systems (the fact that we process oxygen shows you this). So really, you want to cure aging, but don't care about finding cures for babies that are born blind or with genetic disorders? That doesn't make sense. There are millions of disabled people in the world, why not at least improve the quality of their lives first? My brother has a rare genetic disorder and I only observed a fraction of the difficulties he experienced. He endured an incredible amount of pain, dozens of serious symptoms, and cognitive difficulties (not to mention social)- his bones were constantly being rebuilt and growing throughout his childhood. He spent years in leg braces and began walking very late. He never learned to read and I was one of the few people that could understand his speech- I failed him yet again there like everywhere else.
He is only 24 years old. We found out 2 years ago that the seizure medications he had been on throughout childhood had permanently damaged his heart. Only months ago we learned that another consequence of his failing heart also affects his lungs. He is now on a breathing machine at night for COPD. Yet, he doesn't complain about any of that. He is a volunteer sports coach for his old high school and I'm
very proud of him. But, how much longer will he be able to live with this? Nobody ever wants to talk about that. I'm worried. When I look at his condition I already know that it would be risky to assume he will survive to old age.
Will he find a girlfriend before he dies- he adores women? Will he ever get to make love to a woman or hold his own beautiful child? Will I get to plan his wedding or host the baby shower? Will he achieve his dream of becoming a coach for the college football team he is so very passionate about? Will he die before having the collection of experiences in life that the average human is promised upon birth? The small things I take for granted- will he get to experience those too? Surely, if you can create a cure for aging, then a cure for his syndrome shouldn't be a problem. He is very strong and could endure the symptoms (don't worry about that)- can you 'alter' him to at
least survive? Can you also alter all the other children in the world that already desire to experience life to it's fullest, but simply have a tiny little problem barring that from ever happening?
Oh! Please tell, I
beg of you, what will my baby brothers 40th year look like?