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  3. If you could live forever, would you want to?

If you could live forever, would you want to?

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  • F Forogar

    Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

    - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

    S Offline
    S Offline
    sasadler
    wrote on last edited by
    #60

    If we're limited to the Earth, no. I would think the old proverb 'familiarity breeds contempt' would hold true. Eventually you'd have seen everything and pretty much done everything to do, so why stick around? Heh, everyone would be a know it all, and you know how hard it to be around them!

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    • S Slow Eddie

      Read Robert Heinlein's "Lazarus Long" series of books. They are a really great series on that topic.

      I don't want to live forever. Just long enough to pay off all of my credit card debt.

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      Forogar
      wrote on last edited by
      #61

      Apparently someone thinks a recommendation of a series on books that were first printed in the previous millennium is spam. That person obviously likes following rules slavishly. :doh: Good books, by the way. I've read all of them.

      - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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      • Richard DeemingR Richard Deeming

        That depends. Does this treatment halt, or reverse, physical and mental decline? Or do we get to look forward to 900 years of senility, arthritis, and getting up ten times a night to pee? (Although I supposed getting up ten times a night is better than not getting up. :) ) Also, how much does it cost? If you're still paying off the cost of treatment as a quincentenarian, then it doesn't sound like a good deal. Even worse if you have to regularly repeat the treatment.


        "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer

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        Daniel R Przybylski
        wrote on last edited by
        #62

        Now this person watches The Twilight Zone.

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        • S Slow Eddie

          Read Robert Heinlein's "Lazarus Long" series of books. They are a really great series on that topic.

          I don't want to live forever. Just long enough to pay off all of my credit card debt.

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          S Offline
          sasadler
          wrote on last edited by
          #63

          The Honor Harrington series, by David Weber, also gets into the effects of longevity.

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          • R Rage

            Well, I would sit back and watch the humanity go on destroying itself until it is not amusing anymore. So about ten years from now.

            Do not escape reality : improve reality !

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            M chael Luna
            wrote on last edited by
            #64

            It already stopped being amusing.

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            • F Forogar

              Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

              - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              M chael Luna
              wrote on last edited by
              #65

              Yesterday

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              • F Forogar

                Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

                - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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                S Offline
                Sucramsy
                wrote on last edited by
                #66

                I'm already tired of being a responsible adult...

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                • F Forogar

                  Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

                  - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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                  B Offline
                  Bruce Patin
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #67

                  It all depends on whether or not there is a purpose for continuing in this body. I am not my body.

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                  • F Forogar

                    Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

                    - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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                    G Offline
                    Greg Lovekamp
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #68

                    I am financially planning to reach 80 though I honestly doubt that I'll make 24 more years: overweight, inactive, diabetic, etc. I have already thanked my doctor for achieving the goal I requested of him many years ago: keep me alive until my kids are adults. I pointed out the rest is just gravy to me; however, he contends that, like most, I will become greedy for more life as I get older. Time will tell, but any way you look at it, there are a LOT more years in the rearview mirror than ahead through the windshield, and I am fine with that. Tuesday, January 19, 2038, might be a concern for any 32-bit systems remaining. That's coming sooner than we might think, and heck, I might live to see it.

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                    • F Forogar

                      Assuming a new medical breakthrough allowed you to live as long as you like, barring accidents and murders, how long would be long enough? What problems, apart from having to deal with Y10K issues (still probably in COBOL) do you see coming up?

                      - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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                      M Offline
                      maze3
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #69

                      What is it to live? If loss starting not being painful. Also at which point would your view of the world start leaning toward causing genocide for the ridiculous things humanity has done to the plant? As a lover of computers, I also see my own contradiction in that one they have provided significant benefits but also the environmental cost has been hidden for a lack of another term.

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