Life Extension

Ғылым және технология

In this episode we explore technological challenges and solutions for extending the human life span and contemplate some of the challenges an extended lifespan might pose for our civilization.
Visit the SENS Research Foundation: www.sens.org
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @isaacarthursfia
Visit our Website: www.isaacarthur.net
Join the Facebook Group: / 1583992725237264
Support the Channel on Patreon: / isaacarthur
Visit the sub-reddit: / isaacarthur
Listen or Download the audio of this episode from Soundcloud: / life-extension
Cover Art by Jakub Grygier: www.artstation.com/artist/jak...

Пікірлер: 1 700

  • @jgr7487
    @jgr74877 жыл бұрын

    I can only imagine turning to that 300-year younger kid & saying "when I was your age, Pluto was a planet"

  • @ninjamanfu

    @ninjamanfu

    7 жыл бұрын

    pluto was never a planet, but it will always be my favorite stellar body.

  • @dannyrosenberg4175

    @dannyrosenberg4175

    7 жыл бұрын

    JG R that can happen in 5 years

  • @EvolBob1

    @EvolBob1

    7 жыл бұрын

    +ninjamanfu - Pluto was and will always be a planet. Its like telling a person who's been around for 70 years hes no longer a person as he/she is too short! They made a mistake when Pluto was given Planet status, and it could have been justified to correct it after a few years - but not after 70.

  • @Alaveonn

    @Alaveonn

    7 жыл бұрын

    Danny Rosenberg damn

  • @ninjamanfu

    @ninjamanfu

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Evol Bob a person is always a person, no matter what size they are, but collections of particals in space are classified directly by size, density, ect. midgets are people, pluto was never a planet.

  • @ghrey8282
    @ghrey82827 жыл бұрын

    My greatest fear is not living long enough to live forever.

  • @jeremiahlawrence9240

    @jeremiahlawrence9240

    6 жыл бұрын

    Ghrey there's cryonics to answer this problem.

  • @meandmetoo8436

    @meandmetoo8436

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@jeremiahlawrence9240 not really working yet.

  • @dream1430

    @dream1430

    5 жыл бұрын

    Jeremiah Lawrence not viable

  • @AverageGuy2002

    @AverageGuy2002

    5 жыл бұрын

    Just accepted death you are just gonna be reborn again in another body if reincarnation is real🤔

  • @meandmetoo8436

    @meandmetoo8436

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@AverageGuy2002 IF

  • @vladimiryuriev2641
    @vladimiryuriev26417 жыл бұрын

    This channel is criminally under subscribed.

  • @alexgoldsmith8598

    @alexgoldsmith8598

    7 жыл бұрын

    Vladimir Yuriev Very true

  • @danpope3812

    @danpope3812

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes it is but the comment section is fantastic.

  • @cacogenicist

    @cacogenicist

    7 жыл бұрын

    I advertise it with some regularity.

  • @fatetestarossa2774

    @fatetestarossa2774

    7 жыл бұрын

    indeed

  • @Ron4885

    @Ron4885

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree Vladimir. And I just stumbled on it by chance. Now I can't wait till Thur. comes around to get my 'fix'. ;-) After finding this I had some serious binge watching to do.

  • @diablominero
    @diablominero4 жыл бұрын

    Being "bored with life" sounds a lot like a common symptom of depression. Depression is somewhat treatable, and treatments are improving over time.

  • @pancakes8670

    @pancakes8670

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm a young person, so ultimately idk, but I feel like a lot of people would still be able to find things to do with their lives. I feel like a big reason people IRL become tired with old age is due to deterioration of the body and mind, but if that can be eliminated then would someone who's 200 years old but still look 20 have the same energy and vigor?

  • @Nmax

    @Nmax

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pancakes8670 well put. The key is a healthy body for the mind to inhabit. That makes life enjoyable.

  • @Nedia___

    @Nedia___

    Жыл бұрын

    I actually find it interesting how most people, when being told of immortality, get to a point where they say you'd be bored of life, and you'd see your family die and everyone you know die. However, what if it's by choice?

  • @ianharrison5758

    @ianharrison5758

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Nedia___ That also assumes that it’s ONLY you who’s immortal. If even 1% of your species ever chooses true immortality, wanting to see the end of time or whatever, then that’s plenty of friends or family you could never lose. Maintaining friendships over that long may be difficult, but if you live forever then you have forever to mature and get over any distances, and forever to stew over them first if that’s what you want to do. And assuming we can even be immortal, then it would be by a process we can reverse if need be, depending on how it winds up coming abt. It also means that we will have people who are NEAR immortal, the ones who would have taken all the serums or implants that let us develop immortality pills or whatever. I’d want to be at least quasi immortal, living billions of years, because I want to see another species, or if I found them in their neo lithic period, leave a Safe on one of their moons with my number, who I am and why I left it there, an explanation for the Fermi paradox if we find it, and a guarantee I’ll leave them alone if for whatever reason they don’t want to hang out. I’m willing to wait however long I need to in order to do that, but since my own life will likely be limited, I just hope someone else in the future Carry’s the torch I could never pick up

  • @RoySchl
    @RoySchl7 жыл бұрын

    if i would achieve immortality, my life would be complete and i could die happy :)

  • @tomaszmuhr7642

    @tomaszmuhr7642

    7 жыл бұрын

    If we support longevity research then it can happen, it is currently underfunded but with more awareness and support there is a chance you could achieve immortality and die happy :D Anyone who is interested in this can join a longevity discord channel (discord.gg/ftSbffu)

  • @AustGamingAG

    @AustGamingAG

    6 жыл бұрын

    Zamuroy what about people who have died before this technology u would miss them and what about getting married to one person for 300-400 years

  • @RationalAnimations

    @RationalAnimations

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yeah we must donate to SENS

  • @ExtantFrodo2

    @ExtantFrodo2

    6 жыл бұрын

    Aust, dying before the technology would only apply to some people in the first few generations. They will just have to live with it. *"what about getting married to one person for 300-400 years"* What about it? If the 2 of you are happy, so what? If you aren't divorce.

  • @rickharper4533

    @rickharper4533

    4 жыл бұрын

    ExtantFrodo2 well, they will have to not live with it if they are dead before it exists edit: after revisiting this video after 9 months, I have noticed that I forgot a comma.

  • @Aerex12
    @Aerex127 жыл бұрын

    Live forever or die trying. Amen to that

  • @gorilladisco9108

    @gorilladisco9108

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's a goal that will never fail.

  • @williamkirkland2222

    @williamkirkland2222

    3 жыл бұрын

    you could make a religion out of this.

  • @jgr7487
    @jgr74877 жыл бұрын

    I'm taking this as my "how to roleplay an Elf" guide

  • @Phelan666

    @Phelan666

    7 жыл бұрын

    Wait till you get to the part about Slaanesh.

  • @JillKewsNickelFackkot69420

    @JillKewsNickelFackkot69420

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's an eldar.

  • @michaelpettersson4919

    @michaelpettersson4919

    6 жыл бұрын

    And the eldar is a race of space elves. This channel do a lot of space stuff. Btw, where do the eldar belong on the Kardashev scale? ;) Or Slaanesh (Insane homicidal god of lust) itself? :P

  • @redtail564

    @redtail564

    5 жыл бұрын

    Ok. Id rather live long enough to marry an eldar. That is if Space elves even exist.

  • @imgvillasrc1608

    @imgvillasrc1608

    5 жыл бұрын

    +@@redtail564, HERESY!!! ALL XENOS MUST BE PURGED!

  • @TheMajorpickle01
    @TheMajorpickle017 жыл бұрын

    The mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell

  • @hubes69

    @hubes69

    7 жыл бұрын

    no match for super saiyan 2 Gohan though

  • @matheusbarbosa700

    @matheusbarbosa700

    6 жыл бұрын

    I remember this comentary on pornhub videos

  • @solarisone1082

    @solarisone1082

    6 жыл бұрын

    I'm a simple man. I see a Dragon Ball reference, I click "like."

  • @robertweidner2480
    @robertweidner24807 жыл бұрын

    I'd be happy to live thousands upon thousands of years. The movie "The Man From Earth" touches heavily on this topic.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    It was a good film, especially considering the budget, practically a textbook example of how to do a scifi bottle episode right

  • @RoySchl

    @RoySchl

    7 жыл бұрын

    sequel coming soon

  • @timonvinke5117

    @timonvinke5117

    7 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking about that movie as well. Great movie and I was thinking specifically about the part where he mentiones he had the same degrees as all the other professors, just a bit out of date. Another reason you will never get bored in life. The world changes fast enough you will never have seen it all or know all.

  • @suthinscientist9801

    @suthinscientist9801

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@isaacarthurSFIA I'm betting that almost everyone who wants radical life extension doesn't want to spend centuries or millennia as crippled elderly people with kilotons of health problems, but want to spend that much time living as healthy, younger people. After all, what good is radical life extension if you're existing as an elderly with many health problems. I think that's one of the concerns.

  • @o2bnob

    @o2bnob

    3 жыл бұрын

    I went to look up this movie and found it for free on prime and I am now watching it! And I am loving it so far, thanks for mentioning it.

  • @nonzerosumgame4387
    @nonzerosumgame43877 жыл бұрын

    This guy is brilliant! You think a guy with a speech impediment would be presenting a show like this on TV? Not in a million years! All Hail KZread! All Hail Isaac Arthur!

  • @erichart2072

    @erichart2072

    7 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't be surprised to see Isaac doing TV narration someday, and commanding a hefty price for it. His youtube content is compelling, and his speech impediment is a pretty big branding hook. If he keeps rocking it like this and getting more exposure, the unique sound of his voice will one day be synonymous with science (it already is in my head).

  • @webeforjesus6275

    @webeforjesus6275

    7 жыл бұрын

    I love it!!

  • @mushypork1272

    @mushypork1272

    7 жыл бұрын

    yeah, i was betting on Kiwi

  • @stevethomas6584

    @stevethomas6584

    7 жыл бұрын

    Johnathan Ross ???

  • @genericasian5699

    @genericasian5699

    7 жыл бұрын

    I thought he just had the same accent as the hunter from Bugs Bunny.

  • @Drew_McTygue
    @Drew_McTygue7 жыл бұрын

    I am not babysitting my grand-uncle! Great grand pappy is just going to have to hire a robot nanny

  • @orangeSoda35

    @orangeSoda35

    7 жыл бұрын

    They prefer to be called artificial life form.

  • @TheBoundFenrir

    @TheBoundFenrir

    7 жыл бұрын

    Robot Nannys probably aren't advanced enough to count as 'alive'. They'd be like a slightly smarter siri. You'd probably not find many AGI wanting to work as a nanny (although I suppose there might be one who is programmed to find being a nanny just as fun and exciting as humans find sex...but it seems like a niche market, especially considering that if they're smart enough to be alive, they're smart enough to realize the horror being created by eldritch beings that are almost beyond time to babysit Cthulhu.) trans- and post-humanity is gonna get weird FAST...

  • @hubes69

    @hubes69

    7 жыл бұрын

    You'd also have a few generations that were raised almost entirely by these Nannies that would not be very quick to agree with you.

  • @Kojima93

    @Kojima93

    7 жыл бұрын

    Drew McTygue I have met most of my good friends through school and have met many girls and have many relations because of it. honestly if it wasn't for school, I have no idea what life would be life socially. I think that it wouldn't be as bad as you think it would be

  • @NikolaosSkordilis

    @NikolaosSkordilis

    7 жыл бұрын

    "Robot" will be regarded as a racist term in the future; as Steve rightly noted a more politically correct would probably be "artificial life form". Of course in order for that to happen they will need to pay insurance fees and taxes. After that they may even vote. No taxes, no rights, no vote :)

  • @danielhall271
    @danielhall2717 жыл бұрын

    A personal nightmare for me would be a civilization where you need to spend the first 100 years of your life trapped in school.

  • @atanasdimitrov6469

    @atanasdimitrov6469

    7 жыл бұрын

    Meh, you wouldn't have to though, because learning those basic skills isn't going to take more than it does today. As the author of the video said, you wouldn't have to work or study something you don't like, that would let you make a lot of money, simply because, you'll have all the time in the world for children and family later, and therefore you won't need to be making so much money.

  • @Norfarell

    @Norfarell

    7 жыл бұрын

    Especially considering that people are going to improve speed and efficiency of learning by a lot. There is already enormous gap between skilled learners (mnemotechniques, mindmaps, stimulation with electricity) and "normal" learners. Imagine what will happen in next decades, once we develop technology to do virtual reality lessons, or perhaps even just download needed knowledge

  • @ricklewis4442

    @ricklewis4442

    7 жыл бұрын

    Nightmare for you. I'm in my 40's and haven't gone a year without taking a class except while overseas in the military. I would love spending centuries at a university learning and teaching.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    The key thing about extended lifetimes and post-scarcity civ, if you've got both, is that there is very little that you 'have to do' if you just want a reasonably happy and comfortable existence. As the others said below, you will as fast if not faster than now, but you aren't required to do such things unless you have a goal in mind that requires them.

  • @danielhall271

    @danielhall271

    7 жыл бұрын

    I can imagine prerequisite knowledge really piling up over the centuries so that 20+ years of experience is required for most jobs and education is based on degrees that take 50 years to complete. Combine that with our current system of compulsory education and you have a recipe for hell on Earth.

  • @michaeloosthuizen2383
    @michaeloosthuizen23837 жыл бұрын

    I'm beginning to really enjoy Thursdays.

  • @RoySchl
    @RoySchl7 жыл бұрын

    yeah i never heard a good argument against immortality, that wasn't completely short sighted or just taking the world of today adding immortality and pointing out how it doesn't work. of course it does not, you adapt the world and it would probably be a much better one. I find people are often stuck in the mindset of... that's life... that is how the world works... which prevents them from thinking about how it could work better.

  • @AndDiracisHisProphet

    @AndDiracisHisProphet

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes. It is like a hunter gatherer tribe saying that aggriculture can't work, since there would be a hell lot of more people and there are not enough caves where they could live in.

  • @bozo5632

    @bozo5632

    7 жыл бұрын

    Some species are effectively immortal, and they manage to get by. It's exactly the necessary changes to societies that are the worry.

  • @crazyahhkmed

    @crazyahhkmed

    7 жыл бұрын

    Zamuroy Exactly and it's that narrowminded, unimaginative, anti progressive, willfully ignorant, way of thinking that annoys me. And I tend to dissociate myself with those types of people.

  • @Burt1038

    @Burt1038

    7 жыл бұрын

    Plus you can easily see that, given the education and option, most people in general (and women in particular) prefer to have fewer children, later in life. If anything, immortality is the only thing that will stop the paradoxical death spiral of civilization itself.

  • @AustGamingAG

    @AustGamingAG

    6 жыл бұрын

    Zamuroy yea but most people with dead realities wouldn't become immortal unless their kids or grandkids the immortal process then the parent would do it

  • @Bluecho4
    @Bluecho46 жыл бұрын

    The whole Immortal Depression thing, I think, tends to be formatted around characters who are immortal when no one else is. The sorrow comes from watching everyone you love die, and the depression from them not being able to connect with anyone else (either for fear of losing them to time, or from no one being able to GET them). In this scenario, though, none of these things are problems, because EVERYONE is biologically immortal. You'll be able to hang out with the same people for centuries, and always have folks who can understand your problems. The ennui of immortality only applies when a centuries long life is the exception, not the rule. On another note, if you become bored with life after so long, it says more about YOUR unwillingness to get out of your rut and try new things, than it does with life _itself_ being a drag. If you find new things to occupy your time, that problem won't arise. Mass media ALONE would produce more entertainment to occupy me than I could ever watch, and this is likely to remain true even if immortality became a thing tomorrow and I was watching such things every waking moment from now until my death of unnatural causes. It's a massive pool of entertainment resources, and it's constantly being added to. All of this BEFORE I try my hand at making my own.

  • @The_Bird_Bird_Harder

    @The_Bird_Bird_Harder

    Жыл бұрын

    Let's not even consider, this is a situation in where great artists just. Continue on. There is no death of old age before the completion of their great work, there's liable to be people with literal centuries of experience in the arts!

  • @TheCube31

    @TheCube31

    4 ай бұрын

    Honestly? As an amateur artist rn, if immortality actually comes to pass, I see myself... Idk, making my own sort of MCU? My alternate universe of stories in comic format... Or whatever format I'm up for atm Personally I have no issue with the concept of immortality itself (as in, biological immortality, not the real one of course) I mean, think about it, it it *does* happen then we'll get to be the first generation! We'll be those who look at AI and get to say "Ah yes, you're marrying one of those? I remember when that technology still was but a distant dream..." Or stuff like that, plus you'll surely never run out of jobs since, as a first-gen person with more skills and titles than almost anyone else, every company under the sun will try to hire you over the new, less experienced lad who was just born 200 years ago. Things to look forward to, no doubt

  • @jeremyleyland1047
    @jeremyleyland10477 жыл бұрын

    History class would get interesting.

  • @basileus1092

    @basileus1092

    7 жыл бұрын

    "FUCK YOU! My grandfather didn't commit war crimes! Doing X was all right back then... Why don't you talk to him about it if you're so sure?"

  • @jeremyleyland1047

    @jeremyleyland1047

    7 жыл бұрын

    "Well my great grandfather on my mothers side, and 2 grand children, and my great grand uncle's nephew's former room mate said he did! As all of them!"

  • @Triumph263

    @Triumph263

    7 жыл бұрын

    "Excuse me professor but I was the president back then and that's not how it happened." "What are you talking about? I WAS president at the time." "I thought you were the Secretary of State?" "No, I was the Secretary of State the century before that."

  • @HammaneggsAirborne

    @HammaneggsAirborne

    7 жыл бұрын

    Imagine meeting Isambard Kingdom Brunel on the street today, that would essentially be what it would be like. "Oh, you did all of that yet I never have heard of you? Thats some neat stuff you did." "Yeah, perhaps thats because you're not from my country so you didn't learn it in school."

  • @Dylnsgames

    @Dylnsgames

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jeremy Leyland "actually teacher that's not what happened, my great great great great grandfather was there, you can even ask him!"

  • @MardrukZeiss
    @MardrukZeiss7 жыл бұрын

    To quote Nwabudike Morgan, I plan to live forever, of course, but barring that I'd settle for a couple thousand years. Even five hundred would be pretty nice.

  • @evolution031680

    @evolution031680

    4 жыл бұрын

    - The Ethics of Greed, Datalinks.😎

  • @SeanKula

    @SeanKula

    4 жыл бұрын

    Loved that videogame glad to see other people play it.

  • @tariqahmad1371

    @tariqahmad1371

    4 жыл бұрын

    Imagine this, instead of retirement it would be coined as a "long vacation"

  • @luvslogistics1725

    @luvslogistics1725

    2 жыл бұрын

    Loved and miss it. The new attempt doesn’t quite capture it.

  • @Puffycheeks
    @Puffycheeks7 жыл бұрын

    Well Mr. Arthur, I look forward to hearing you speak at some science convention in a hundred years or so..

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    :)

  • @anceru5801

    @anceru5801

    3 жыл бұрын

    97 years more to go!

  • @cxxx8492

    @cxxx8492

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@anceru5801 96

  • @happysmash27

    @happysmash27

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cxxx8492 95

  • @jaydrianpieters7718

    @jaydrianpieters7718

    Жыл бұрын

    94

  • @kokofan50
    @kokofan507 жыл бұрын

    I actually know about a Russian guy who killed a bear with a pocket knife and another guy who "won" a fist fight with bear. The first guy was protecting some idiot hikers from a bear they pissed off by shoving his down the bear's throt and stabbing the bear in the neck. The second guy had been some kind of boxing champion in Canada and keeping up that athletic life style he was jogging and somehow found himself between a mother bear and her cub. Mama bear didn't like that and attacked the guy. In the shuffle the guy got in a couple punches and the bear cub get back to its mother's side, so the mother bear decided to leave.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Some people are just badasses :)

  • @jebes909090

    @jebes909090

    7 жыл бұрын

    kokofan50 bears know better then to mess with russians

  • @GreenspaceGeckos

    @GreenspaceGeckos

    3 жыл бұрын

    Their many stories in canada about us canadians fighting bears, when i was 3 i chased a black bear out of our yard when i lived in sub arctic a tourist was mauled in front of my apartment and my neighbor fought the polar bear off globalnews.ca/news/1968579/manitoba-man-who-fought-off-polar-to-receive-star-of-courage/amp/ I had a few close calls i kicked quite a few black bears at the dump you will find most rual Canadians have

  • @samsmith1580
    @samsmith15807 жыл бұрын

    Great video as always. One thing that I haven't seen talked about here or elsewhere is the problem of risk aversion. People who can only die in accidents may become so risk averse that they end up living their lives like Howard Hughes (without the weird personal habits) because they are so afraid of some sort of accident that might kill them.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think because it is so hard to predict, some might take a longer life and grow more risk averse, others less. I am sure the older one gets the lower the odds of dying the next year would grow though, except where will to survive diminished or a sense of invincibility was kindled. Its hard to say.

  • @johnathanmartin1504

    @johnathanmartin1504

    7 жыл бұрын

    @Isaac Arthur If you're around a couple hundred years from now then mind uploading will make this a moot point however. As much as I find the gameplay of Eve Online boring, it has a fascinating backstory, namely that people die constantly, but then they are uploaded into a new body. I think that will become the norm three or four centuries from now (so you will die several times, but your consciousness just goes into a new body). Of course you also have to take into account that scientists living that long may find ways of storing consciousness within DNA itself, at which point you could survive if just one of your cells does.

  • @Ali-lm7uw

    @Ali-lm7uw

    6 жыл бұрын

    Johnathan Martin 200 years from now I am sure the human body will not be as fragile as it is now. Be it through bionic means or others, the human body will be resistant to pretty much everything. But ofcourse, that is possible when we firsr extend our lives to live 200 years more.

  • @sherwan8143

    @sherwan8143

    5 жыл бұрын

    If we have the technology to live forever, then we have the technology to fix the damage done in accidents - probably

  • @aaronsilver-pell411

    @aaronsilver-pell411

    4 жыл бұрын

    That is very true, you have to take risks and it is probably the case that those who don't take risks will die anyway. You need revivification too.

  • @francoislacombe9071
    @francoislacombe90717 жыл бұрын

    Hunting lions with a nerf bat, that's awesome! ^_^

  • @icecold9511

    @icecold9511

    4 жыл бұрын

    Or fall down a black hole while listening to Johnny Cash.

  • @alonzoc537

    @alonzoc537

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@icecold9511 I went down down down and the flames went higher!

  • @_sky_3123
    @_sky_31237 жыл бұрын

    This is my first You-Tube comment ever, and I am a guy studying computer science. That is how much I like your channel. PS: It is also the first ever channel I had ever subscribed to. Good Luck in the future.

  • @ArchAngelThomas

    @ArchAngelThomas

    7 жыл бұрын

    public class HelloSky { public static void main (String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello _Sky_! Good luck studying computer science! It's tons of fun!"); } }

  • @justinnengel3473

    @justinnengel3473

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ew, java...

  • @diamondvideos1061

    @diamondvideos1061

    5 жыл бұрын

    It was my first subscription as well!

  • @MatthewCampbell765
    @MatthewCampbell7657 жыл бұрын

    On the topic of skills like artistic abilities (IE, playing music) one of the main limits would be what the human body is capable of (unless you augment yourself), the other would be what the listener/viewer is capable of understanding. For example, a transhuman author might write up a book with a plot simply too complicated for unaugmented humans to follow without great difficulty. Same thing goes for music-a transhuman musician might eventually find normal music too simplistic and start exploring music in ranged beyond the baseline's ability to hear it or understand it. For example, lots of ultrasound notes playing faster than a baseline ear could listen to it.

  • @MrAdryan1603
    @MrAdryan16036 жыл бұрын

    This has been one of my favorite videos.Your imagination based in reality and science and the accurate scenarios you discuss are unlike anything I've ever seen on this site. Brilliant, thank you.

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun4 жыл бұрын

    I haven't bothered to check through the hundreds of answers, just wanted to mention, in case you haven't read it, the Red Mars/Blue Mars/Green Mars trilogy, for the sake of storyline continuity, extreme life extension was employed. People on Mars did end up doing daring, dangerous sports, such as using flying squirrel suits to soar in the thickened atmosphere, in the thermals. No spoilers: One of the leading characters dies accidentally because of such risk-taking behaviour, which is quite upsetting and jarring during a good read. I actually cried. Isaac, I actually wish I could converse with you, in person, as a real life friend. As a high-functioning Aspie, being shut in is not as traumatic for me as for others, but I miss substantive human conversations. You ALWAYS help me to think ore clearly, and cause me to immediately bring to mind examples of whatever you mention, from the over 400 fiction and non fiction books I've read over my life. Everything you say makes me think, or wonder, or want to ask, "But what about...?" If I ever run for political office, which I have been considering (which is hard, given my mental deficit to gift ratio), I would be honoured to have you as at least an inspiration, and more so, if we were properly acquainted. You remind me of a non-fiction version of one of the best authors of all time, Piers Anthony. Oh, yeah. Btw, Piers **also** wrote a Mars trilogy, but his was using science, fantasy and magick, creating a fuller Tarot deck along the way (which I consider a Psychological tool, rather than a true predictor). If you **ever** need any consulting help in my areas of study, please ask. I have separate Bachelor's degrees in Psychology and Religious Studies, separate minors in Anthropology and Biology, after an Associate of Arts. My late dad got me into sci-fi. Mom got me into Sciences. They both were college educated. At 52, living with undetectable HIV for half my life, and artificial hips, I long to become immortal. My life course was taken from me, altered, and in spite of me fighting back, HIV is a genuine pain. To close: My life often sux. You make it suck so much less. Thank you. May The Force Be With You, such that you may Live Long And Prosper.

  • @akapilka

    @akapilka

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Such a great comment. I hope Isaac reads it.

  • @eunhjzjined3795
    @eunhjzjined37957 жыл бұрын

    Episode too short. Needs extension...

  • @ryanscott55
    @ryanscott556 жыл бұрын

    Have a career for 100 years, then spending the remaining 500 or so years exploring the galaxy. Sounds good to me.

  • @y__h
    @y__h7 жыл бұрын

    Existence is painful Unexistence is dreadful

  • @96ace96

    @96ace96

    7 жыл бұрын

    I do not think existence is painful. Then again, I have had a very fortunate life so far. And I wish everyone could have that.

  • @fatetestarossa2774

    @fatetestarossa2774

    7 жыл бұрын

    well said Dave

  • @iIO_OIi

    @iIO_OIi

    7 жыл бұрын

    Existence can be painful, and I've had a less than ideal life, but there are wonders to discover, and experiences to be had, and for those I have a will, and a desire to live, although I also accept that eventually I'll die, and I just hope that it's with some dignity- not getting murdered or caught in a car crash or "what have you". Minus the religious-ness, the way I think is probably a kin to how people like Issac Newton thought (& think).

  • @iIO_OIi

    @iIO_OIi

    7 жыл бұрын

    When I say this, I mean the part where I'm in wonder by the world & discovery.

  • @Self-replicating_whatnot

    @Self-replicating_whatnot

    7 жыл бұрын

    I was unexistant for all the time in the universe till 30 years ago, and didn't suffer a bit from that. Was very uneventfull though, so i'm not looking forward to unexisting again :)

  • @silverhawk7324
    @silverhawk73244 жыл бұрын

    This would be absolutely fantastic! I could pursue every game, novel, movie and other type of media that has ever came out and will in the future!

  • @Kram1032
    @Kram10327 жыл бұрын

    Now I don't know of any statistics about this but anecdotally, from what I heard, lots of researchers will tend to change the topics they work on over time, either as they feel they have contributed enough in their current field or because they want to find something new-and-fun-to-them or sometimes directly out of activism (like, for instance, there are quite a few people who used to resarch, say, fundamental physics, but then transitioned to climate sciences because they consider the topic of critical importance) so with that in mind I'm not entirely sure the people who first successfully find ways to craft arbitrary lifespans will end up researching that same topic for their whole arbitrarily long lives.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sure, interest vary over time but while you might change focus and get a little rusty on the original, you never really lose that expertise and can scrub the rust off rather quickly, often emerging with greater expertise from having new insights from letting it wait and looking at other things.

  • @JohnStephenWeck

    @JohnStephenWeck

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree, and immortals make the ultimate renaissance men.

  • @Kram1032

    @Kram1032

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's true enough

  • @Simurgh1000

    @Simurgh1000

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree. Additionally I believe there are new insights to be gained from studying seemingly disparate fields and sciences. Using the example that Kram gave, perhaps a biochemist or even a sociologist could add a unique perspective on climate science, potentially leading to a breakthrough that may not have happened if someone didn't connect interdisciplinary theory or phenomena.

  • @Starpilot149
    @Starpilot1497 жыл бұрын

    I very recently found your channel, and I'm continually astounded at how you can create such thorough, comprehensive, and interesting material on such a regular basis. These are the sorts of videos I would be content to wait a month for.

  • @diamondvideos1061

    @diamondvideos1061

    5 жыл бұрын

    I for one can't wait for Thursdays now :)

  • @jinzo457
    @jinzo4573 жыл бұрын

    Honestly this video gives me hope when I get down, thinking about my dead end job and how I'll never get to learn the things I want to learn, or contribute to civilization in any way aside from helping produce overpriced cars. I come back to this video every once in a while and watch it to remain hopeful about the future.

  • @jazarstevens
    @jazarstevens7 жыл бұрын

    Isaac Arthur and PBS Space Time is all the KZread i need

  • @scientistsbaffled5730

    @scientistsbaffled5730

    7 жыл бұрын

    jazar stevens vsauce (1) is good too.

  • @B0bb217
    @B0bb2177 жыл бұрын

    someone: overpopulation tho me: arcologies them: what?

  • @samandriaz5905

    @samandriaz5905

    5 жыл бұрын

    Also since we are immortal we can have more time to do what we like and then settle down and raise children by the time we reach the 200s

  • @briandiehl9257

    @briandiehl9257

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@samandriaz5905 I'm surprised to see a resent comment in here, I'm amazed

  • @devonrusinek5807

    @devonrusinek5807

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@briandiehl9257 That's KZread for ya

  • @gorilladisco9108

    @gorilladisco9108

    3 жыл бұрын

    Archology are for primitive civilizations. O'Neal cylinder FTW.

  • @marlonlacert8133
    @marlonlacert81337 жыл бұрын

    LoL "Bare knuckle boxing with a bear." that is the best one I have heard! Have you read my main book, as My motto is also, Keep up the amazing work.

  • @afz902k

    @afz902k

    7 жыл бұрын

    Actually, "bear knuckle boxing" is real, these are worn by each boxer: images1.tickld.com/live/686354.png

  • @marlonlacert8133

    @marlonlacert8133

    7 жыл бұрын

    *Frnkn shw, But with a bear? As far as I know, doing so with a wild animal as ones opponent is not too common of a practice.

  • @Brastius

    @Brastius

    7 жыл бұрын

    There's also bear wrestling, alligator wrestling, and pig wrestling.

  • @marlonlacert8133

    @marlonlacert8133

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ah.. but it is safer to do greco roman wrestling. And was greased pig wrestling not use as a form of entertainment in days of yore. As for alligator wrestling, I did see a man fight to put on a pair of alligator boots. And that looked painful enough.

  • @BigDickEnergy777

    @BigDickEnergy777

    6 жыл бұрын

    I laughed myself off during this part, Isaac surely knows how to be funny!

  • @ASLUHLUHCE
    @ASLUHLUHCE4 жыл бұрын

    "Live forever or die trying" - Isaac Arthur

  • @hellfiresiayan
    @hellfiresiayan7 жыл бұрын

    As long as we give longer lifespans to our dogs, I'm happy.

  • @ryananastasiaquinn5543

    @ryananastasiaquinn5543

    Жыл бұрын

    Greg Fahy's work on the Thymus Gland and TRIMM Trial .... ;) they are heading towards the pets now ....

  • @maxnullifidian
    @maxnullifidian6 жыл бұрын

    I could never get bored with life - there's just so much to do and learn!

  • @cr4yv3n

    @cr4yv3n

    Жыл бұрын

    And Mars would open up in a century opening up A WHOLE NEW PLANET. Then Venus!

  • @eclecticgamer5144
    @eclecticgamer51443 жыл бұрын

    Gives all new meaning to "One big family"... You could *easily* have a person with 1000's of decedents all living/working as a single unit.

  • @fleiteh
    @fleiteh6 жыл бұрын

    One of the things awesome about your videos is high replay value. I must have watched/listened to some of your videos several times already and enjoyed them every time.

  • @alexanderblom6754
    @alexanderblom67547 жыл бұрын

    I rarely comment on any video, so you know that I mean it when I type the following. I love your content! Great stuff. I tend to watch them within a day of release and it is worth it every damn time. Keep it up, you are reaching the critical threshold of subs!(or whatever it's called when sub number rapidly increase) All of a sudden you'll have ten times as many subs, and you'll have earned every last one.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Alexander, I hope you're right, though to be honest I prefer the 'slow' steady growth, the channel has 40x as many subscribers as this time last year :)

  • @smario2820
    @smario28207 жыл бұрын

    My favourite channel and broadcaster on youtube by a long mile. Big fan! Thank you Isaac!

  • @brianjustice908
    @brianjustice9087 жыл бұрын

    I look forward to these videos every week and tell all my friends about it. thank you sir and please keep it up.

  • @damonawesome
    @damonawesome7 жыл бұрын

    This really lifted my spirits, thanks Isaac!!

  • @liranpiade4499
    @liranpiade44997 жыл бұрын

    I'm nearly 18. I really hope I'm young enough for that.

  • @7lllll

    @7lllll

    7 жыл бұрын

    there's probably not much difference in chances between 18 and 0. chances increase substantially at older ages, but once down to 18, most of the negative results comes down to "not coming for centuries."

  • @liranpiade4499

    @liranpiade4499

    7 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking of 18 as opposed to 40.

  • @liranpiade4499

    @liranpiade4499

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** The point is that that damage could be fully repaired. Maybe you took a few years off your lifespan (I've had my fair share of sweets and 2 hours of sleep before an 8 hour school day), but it'd likely still suffice for all of the damage to be repaired so that you and I could live indefinitely.

  • @96ace96

    @96ace96

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Liran Piade I hope so. That would be nice. Maybe we could meet up sometime in the next 500 years, see if any of us remember a comment made on an internet video when humanity was still beginning to stretch.

  • @7lllll

    @7lllll

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Liran Piade what i said basically means that you have almost as good of a chance of being young enough as anyone on earth living today could possibly have

  • @gammaechofoundationproductions
    @gammaechofoundationproductions6 жыл бұрын

    Another awesome episode, Issac! Even if we never live to see life extension technology become a reality, it is important to set goals by prioritizing them. When something is important, you make the time, regardless of how long you live! :)

  • @erichart2072
    @erichart20727 жыл бұрын

    This is one of your best, Isaac. If we do achieve radical life extension in our lifetimes, I sincerely hope you never get bored with making these videos. I could watch these forever.

  • @MsUbersoldat
    @MsUbersoldat6 жыл бұрын

    And again I feel like crying out of happyness after hearing your view on future possibilities... Thank You!!

  • @theinte11igent1
    @theinte11igent17 жыл бұрын

    I could master all of the video games in the world. I might even become as good as thelegend27.

  • @jazzensemble

    @jazzensemble

    7 жыл бұрын

    dude, that is my plan too. I'll get as good as a human TASbot.

  • @steriopticon2687

    @steriopticon2687

    6 жыл бұрын

    Fallout 4,000

  • @Xperim

    @Xperim

    5 жыл бұрын

    But the most important question is, would Half-Life 3 be out?

  • @databanks

    @databanks

    5 жыл бұрын

    Nah, there are always new games coming out so you're still fighting an uphill battle unless you want to just select a few to master and ignore the rest

  • @meandmetoo8436

    @meandmetoo8436

    4 жыл бұрын

    Video games would come out at such a pace that you wouldn't have the time to spell their names.

  • @yeah9071
    @yeah90717 жыл бұрын

    you have to do a second episode on this topic!

  • @izar3699
    @izar36993 жыл бұрын

    Regarding retirement and such, I think we would end up with cyclic careers. Work for 40 or 50 years, "retire" for a few decades and just chill. Then spend a decade refreshing your skills and learning new stuff, repeat ad infinitum. As for someone spending a few centuries getting overwhelmingly good at something I think those would be the outliers. Most would get bored and move on to something new.

  • @user-du3jr2gp1o
    @user-du3jr2gp1o7 жыл бұрын

    I've been watching your videos for a while now, and your uploads are slowly becoming the best part of my day. Thanks for the effort you put into your videos. :)

  • @FirstRisingSouI
    @FirstRisingSouI7 жыл бұрын

    The king asked the shepherd boy, "How many seconds are there in eternity?" And the shepherd boy said, "There is a mountain made of pure diamond. It takes an hour to climb it, and an hour to go around it. Every hundred years, a little bird comes to the mountain sharpen its beak. And when the entire mountain is worn away, the first second of eternity will have passed."

  • @johnathanmartin1504

    @johnathanmartin1504

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's one hell of a bird.

  • @stephentaylor6726

    @stephentaylor6726

    4 жыл бұрын

    That's...exactly the kind of dumb answer you'd expect from an uneducated sheep herder, actually. Nonsensical and grossly inaccurate on every conceivable level.

  • @codysodyssey3818

    @codysodyssey3818

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@stephentaylor6726 What's so nonsensical about it? it perfectly encapsulates the utter inconceivability of "eternity"

  • @stephentaylor6726

    @stephentaylor6726

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@codysodyssey3818 no it doesn't. There's no subdivision of infinity. No such thing as half of infinity or a 'second' of an eternity as measured by a nonsensical gibberish story. It does nothing to give you a sense of the scale of it and is just one of those self congratulating jerk off session to make someone sound wise and insightful when they have all the depth of a sheet of tracing paper.

  • @stephentaylor6726

    @stephentaylor6726

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PhDyMy yeup...I'm a total piece of shit. Fundamentally unlikable...but also 100% right.

  • @KohuGaly
    @KohuGaly7 жыл бұрын

    The biggest problem we would face would be plagues. Ageing is a biological adaptation that forces you to recombine your genome and produce new variants. Stagnant gene-pool combined with overpopulation increases the risk of an infectious disease specializing for that particular gene-pool. Don't assume medicine will somehow fix this in the future. Bacteria and viruses are currently evolving faster than medicine progresses, despite the fact that medicine/pharmacy is the fastest growing field of study, spending 16% of income into RnD (which is double than any other industry). The antibiotic-resistence-crisis is currently the biggest problem humanity faces (maybe on par with grobal climate change) and potential doomsday scenario. Even if we develop successful life-extension technology describled here you will be lucky to survive your 200ths due to annual literally decimating plagues.

  • @JohnStephenWeck

    @JohnStephenWeck

    7 жыл бұрын

    Make the bacteria immortal as well ;)

  • @GhostInTheShell29

    @GhostInTheShell29

    7 жыл бұрын

    While it be folly to assume we'd be plague proof. I think you might be overestimating the problem. If everyone is healthy then we got good immune systems the number one defense you can get. (except for those few diseases that kill you via your immune system over responding) And that RnD budget, could be spent far more effectively. An anti aging serum is by its very nature going to cure a decent amount of the diseases we spend the majority of our RnD budget on.

  • @KohuGaly

    @KohuGaly

    7 жыл бұрын

    A plague is a disease that can kill an otherwise healthy person and can spread quickly. It is by definition a kind of disease that an anti-ageing serum does not fix. Sure, improved heathcare reduces a risk of disease becoming a plague, because it limits its lethality and spread, rendering would-be-plagues impotent. However, it actually does no good when a real plague eventually occurs, which is an eventuality. A society that lived centuries/millennia with no plagues occurring may be set up to prevent plagues, but is unlikely to be set up to deal with them once they came. We are talking about a scenario where people are basically immortal and suddenly a real deadly treat appears. That is a recipe for societal collapse if I've ever seen one. A societal collapse is an epidemiologist's worse nightmare.

  • @GhostInTheShell29

    @GhostInTheShell29

    7 жыл бұрын

    Most RnD spending is going towards diseases like cancer, and many other conditions, problems that generally happen to older people. If your not spending money on any of those avenue's you have a lot more funding for other research. Plagues can kill perfectly healthy people, but are less likely to do so. Only known historical exception to that I know of is the great influenza outbreak. Black Death, white plague, and ect, were still capable of killing people with good immune systems but the young survived better then other age groups. Societal collapse is always possible, but given our history, you need a plague with a fatality rate in excess of 50% to really destroy a society. Anything less then that is generally just a set back for a few generations.

  • @jeremiahlawrence9240

    @jeremiahlawrence9240

    6 жыл бұрын

    KohuGaly you're failing to see that it's possible to engineer oneself in order to become something else. One would not remain a stagnant organism in the future but evolve through a different mean than reproduction.

  • @bratwizard
    @bratwizard3 жыл бұрын

    I love this channel. Every time I think I've heard the best, I fire up another one and find an even better one.

  • @jscotthatcher380
    @jscotthatcher3807 жыл бұрын

    your videos are great to listen to/watch while playing sci-fi games like RimWorld and Subterrain. i especially enjoy how in-depth they go and how well put together they are.

  • @abramthiessen8749
    @abramthiessen87497 жыл бұрын

    I am excited for the next episode. It is difficult to attempt listing them or contemplating an alient that communicates with sights and sounds (like us) trying to communicate to an alien that communicates mostly with electricity or chemicals just because of the limitations of those mediums. We know so little about the languages of birds, apes, whales and dolphins and they use sounds like we do.

  • @azuurasmr7937
    @azuurasmr79372 жыл бұрын

    I hope to see a lot more progress in the near future in this area!

  • @luvslogistics1725
    @luvslogistics17252 жыл бұрын

    Best channel on KZread! Most fascinating topics with depth and intelligence unmatched.

  • @Mostly_Crazy
    @Mostly_Crazy7 жыл бұрын

    I so look forward to your videos every week. amazing work!

  • @hthytrgh
    @hthytrgh7 жыл бұрын

    Isaac, Thank you for all your work and the great videos. its great, Thank you so much. I always enjoy them!

  • @hthytrgh

    @hthytrgh

    7 жыл бұрын

    EEEP Senpai noticed me!!!

  • @davecarsley8773
    @davecarsley87737 жыл бұрын

    One thing I'd posit to be among the largest cultural shocks is that -- after the first wave of stubborn old folks refusing the pill died off -- you'd come to a point in humanity where *every* person (or almost every person) you ever knew would die a violent death. Physically, this shouldn't really be considered "bad", as most people who die violently do so with ultimately far less suffering for far less time (many never even knowing, or only knowing for a few seconds, that they're about to die) than those who die naturally. Emotionally though, this could get weird. Think of every person you will ever know (friends, kids, grandkids, parents) being like those one or two folks you know who died in a car accident or were tragically murdered. No more _"he lived a good life and was ready to go"_; no more _"at least we all got to say goodbye and be by his side"_. Your relationship with everyone in your life - instead of just a few people - would conclude with that shocking phone call. I'm not discounting that some folks would simply stop taking the pill by choice, but I truly believe they'd be few and far between. I think most people who say _"I wouldn't want to live to be 150"_ are only saying that because our current view of that involves about 80 years of walkers, poor eyesight, back pain, health issues, and being considered "the old guy". Also interesting: what happens to the cost of prison populations when billions of people are eventually serving "life sentences" simultaneously? Do we just make murder a 100 year crime at that point?

  • @bozo5632

    @bozo5632

    7 жыл бұрын

    Only rarely. Incidents of death by violence would decrease due to increased risk aversion and better trauma care. Maybe it's true, "everyone you knew would die by violence," but those deaths would be increasingly rare events. Most centuries, everyone you knew wouldn't die at all.

  • @daeho2
    @daeho27 жыл бұрын

    Could be listening to this channel all day long.

  • @snakeshepard9761
    @snakeshepard97616 жыл бұрын

    OMG I looked for this argument for years and finally I found a video talking about what I wanted to "know". I love this channel!

  • @adamanderson3042
    @adamanderson30425 жыл бұрын

    I'm 21 I'm 99% confident I will live to multi-centuries simply because I'm certain I'll live enough to see the technology that will allow me to live long enough to see the perfect technology that allows me to live until accidental death.

  • @sebastianstark3224

    @sebastianstark3224

    4 жыл бұрын

    unless you go hunting lions with a nerf bat.

  • @pacus123
    @pacus1237 жыл бұрын

    Hmm, interesting episode Isaac but I was kinda looking more forward to the actual technologies involved in life extension. You briefly covered a couple but then quickly jumped to what life would be like with this technology instead. Perhaps you can do another video about the different types of research being conducted into longevity? I rely on you to dumb science down to a level where I can understand stuff! :-)

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Try the Sens link, they do a good job

  • @carterflex6
    @carterflex67 жыл бұрын

    This channel is the best. I always feel warm inside after finishing a video.

  • @scientistsbaffled5730

    @scientistsbaffled5730

    7 жыл бұрын

    TheCool Cat he is very optimistic, and its refreshing.

  • @TheWraithkrown
    @TheWraithkrown7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for another great video. Your content is almost always thought provoking.

  • @Strr27
    @Strr277 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if human brain can take in all of those knowledge and memories of living a couple of centuries.

  • @pineapplepenumbra

    @pineapplepenumbra

    7 жыл бұрын

    Two centuries should be fine, half a millennium might be a different matter for most people. I think I would be fine, as I have a different perception of time to most people. For example, there was someone I thought I hadn't seen for 3 years and it turned out to be 7. People think I've been with my girlfriend a long time, but to me it just seems fairly normal. My memories go back a *long way*, I remember a hell of a lot (nothing like that of someone with an eidetic memory of course) and would certainly be fine with a few centuries. The problem of everyone one is close to dying is (with the exception of my girlfriend) one I've already encountered and can cope with. With a few centuries one can cultivate a variety of friendships including, presumably, with other long lived people.

  • @yamamasfishytaco9450

    @yamamasfishytaco9450

    6 жыл бұрын

    It's complicated. The human brain is really nothing like a hard-drive (which has a very finite limit on how much information it can store) and the truth is we don't really understand how memories work. Current estimates are that the human brain in it's original and unmodified state could hold more information than the entire internet. Of course actually getting it to hold that information, accessing the information once we have it and making sure that important memories aren't overwritten is the tricky part but I don't think most people would struggle with several centuries or a millennium of memory. In the intervening centuries though we would be developing technology to help the brain work faster, store more memory and be better at accessing all of those memories.

  • @aleksandrassivkovas9966

    @aleksandrassivkovas9966

    5 жыл бұрын

    If they can not they just die. problem solved.

  • @Duke00x

    @Duke00x

    5 жыл бұрын

    We will be fine. Our brains already discard unnecessary memories. I mean do you remember every second of yesterday? No you just remember the highlights and some vague overview of your day like what room you were in at approximately what time but not every small moment you made. And s the amount of time that has passed between now and some moment in the past the less details you remember about it. And this would still be true. But Instead of not remembering if something happened this day or that day or this month or that month it would be this year or that year or this decade or that decade or this century or that century. You will forget you lived in a state or country for a decade or two. But if you see a picture you may remember it and few things that happened during that time but not most things. And the same will be true of skills you learn if you haven't used them in 50 r 200 years you will likely not remember them perfectly and forget a detail here and there about them especially the more complex ones and will need to relearn or at least practice them again.

  • @berniemitchell48

    @berniemitchell48

    4 жыл бұрын

    My worry example exactly, I'm 70 and it gets marginally harder to remember details of what happened in my past each year. Names are particularly hard to call up. It's not senility, I can still bring them up, it just takes longer. What this grows into in a hundred years is a problem for that time. I would still like to live a longer life but see many problems

  • @guidowitt-dorring124
    @guidowitt-dorring1247 жыл бұрын

    Can't believe you didn't mention telomeres, they are a big part in current aging theories.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Of many of them yes, I did mention them of course, I just cut it out. There's usually like four or five scripts for these things and it was in one discussing the pros and cons of Programmed Death theories of aging. There's never enough time for everything in the episodes. I needed to address Wear and Tear as the best known theory, and Free Radical as one of better known modern ones and as a 'simple fix' option, in the end the others weren't vital.

  • @urbankoistinen5688

    @urbankoistinen5688

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lobsters are supposed to potentially live indefinitely long, at least if the shell could be repaired.

  • @guidowitt-dorring124

    @guidowitt-dorring124

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ah I understand :) Regarding the complexity of the whole aging topic, I highly doubt that it's going to be solved by a magic pill :/, i think it will be a long and difficult process tackling all the different aspects of aging one by one. I wouldn't think at all that it's possible to reach immortality in our lifetime, if it wasn't for the unpredictability of artificial intelligence development and resulting scientific progress. Great videos though, keep it up!

  • @urbankoistinen5688

    @urbankoistinen5688

    7 жыл бұрын

    If telomeres are the silver bullet, then we just have to watch Liz Parrish in about 20-30 years. She is supposed to have managed to lengthen hers.

  • @greGunz
    @greGunz7 жыл бұрын

    I seldom comment but I feel obliged to say how amazing these videos are, you can see real effort and dedication. I had an immense feeling of joy when I realised that this wasnt a new channel and that I had many more videos to watch. Heres to hoping this channel really takes off and gets the attention it deserves.

  • @scottmitchell1974
    @scottmitchell19743 жыл бұрын

    The current and known brevity of life is what makes most of life's small (and big) pleasures so...pleasurable.

  • @alexgoldsmith8598
    @alexgoldsmith85987 жыл бұрын

    If people had the ability to live for a very long time (5+ centuries or something), would mutations of DNA become much more significant due to our extended lives? Do you think that could become a problem? Or if we had the technology to live that long would we be able to counter the effects?

  • @bozo5632

    @bozo5632

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's already a growing problem, as life expectancy has been increasing. If disease, hunger, violence or crocodiles don't get you, something like cancer eventually will. Or, it used to anyway - cancer survival rates are increasing fast. The same technologies that could extend life could also repair genetic damage. (Might be the exact same process.)

  • @yeah9071
    @yeah90717 жыл бұрын

    Whenever the breakthrough happens (and it will in max 30 years) It will be the most important scientific discovery in history, the equivalent of liftoff for humanity.

  • @jebes909090

    @jebes909090

    7 жыл бұрын

    yeah what about the creation of mecha jesus 2? able to turn children into wine?

  • @nickv8334

    @nickv8334

    7 жыл бұрын

    not THE most important one i think. but at least somewhere on the top at the very least. but we would not have come here without fire, aquaculture, the first steam engine and electricity. i still consider those slightly higher.

  • @bozo5632

    @bozo5632

    7 жыл бұрын

    Why liftoff? Seems like it might be the opposite. Longevity implies risk aversion. Humanity might turn inward and stagnate. The decadence of empire writ large.

  • @yeah9071

    @yeah9071

    7 жыл бұрын

    How can it stagnate if people get to get smarter for hundreds of years. Right now people actually get smarter (in terms of iq) till 40, After that it's just accumulating experience.

  • @garystone2307
    @garystone23077 жыл бұрын

    Stellar video as always, thank you for making these videos

  • @SG-Gody
    @SG-Gody4 жыл бұрын

    Issac, thank you for your incite, just sensational content all the time.

  • @hatemastertenn1048
    @hatemastertenn10484 жыл бұрын

    How to live longer until humans can live forever 1. Go to space 2. Go out of are solar system 3. Wait for a few earth decades 4. buy the product if it’s out 5. You can live forever

  • @Kakantor

    @Kakantor

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why do we need to go to space for that?

  • @hatemastertenn1048

    @hatemastertenn1048

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Kakantor probably to stop aging or something

  • @Kakantor

    @Kakantor

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hatemastertenn1048 But why do you need to go to space for that?

  • @hatemastertenn1048

    @hatemastertenn1048

    3 жыл бұрын

    I have no idea what I even meant now since this was 1 year ago I thought that if you were in space you could stop the process of aging

  • @Kakantor

    @Kakantor

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hatemastertenn1048 yeah i also make comments i forget about 😂

  • @donaldhobson8873
    @donaldhobson88737 жыл бұрын

    But surely after 50 years or less of the radical life extension tech, they would have developed the tech to enhance themselves a lot. At about this point superintellegences upgrade themselves to hyprintelegences and a few years after that you have a matrioska brain full of digital mind(s). Don't assume that people will stay people for hundreds of years, this video shows what happens if radical life extension is discovered but then we stop researching these things.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm not assuming that, but you know I prefer to isolate changes and talk about a single tech somewhat in a vacuum, I covered the alternative path in the original Transhumanism episode. Anyway, while I would expect a lot of folks to go that path, many others might stick to baseline bodies. Many folks will hesitate at life extension, but of those who do, many will hesitate at something more radical too.

  • @numberjackfiutro7412

    @numberjackfiutro7412

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@isaacarthurSFIA How long do you think it will be before radical life extension becomes possible? I've heard it could come as early as the 2030s.

  • @dream1430

    @dream1430

    5 жыл бұрын

    Numberjack Fiutro the most reasonable predictions are for about 2040, if at all

  • @Simurgh1000
    @Simurgh10007 жыл бұрын

    Always great to see your videos. I liked how you added more of a personal touch with this one. I for one enjoy hearing how your own perspectives and experiences relate to the topics at hand. Hopefully we can all live and contribute to society and each other for many more generations to come.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes I always avoided that in earlier episodes for fear of tainting them with my own opinion too much, I've been trying to straddle letting a bit more of my own perspective in without too much bias, but its tricky.

  • @Simurgh1000

    @Simurgh1000

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your reply. I have decided to become one of your patreon supporters and I for one would like to hear more of your personal insights and opinions. Sometimes those intuitions are really the synthesis of deeper intellectual analysis. Maybe that could be a rich source of content in the future? Wishing you well and looking forward to your next videos. :)

  • @mdrakonnia2933
    @mdrakonnia29336 жыл бұрын

    I imagine that with longetivity there would be at least two new systems: *1)* Resets. It's a fact that your perception of time and experiences changes dramatically as you age, so some people may want to force amnesia on themselves to start a new life. This could also prove useful in legal/medical situations. And even if you biologically don't remember, you still have a digital database for your previous "lives." *2)* Work cycles (Well, the very definition of "working" may change too but this is hypothetical). Basically like work shifts, but on a way bigger scale involving weeks to decades to centuries depending on your perception of time.

  • @pandariuskairos3841
    @pandariuskairos38417 жыл бұрын

    The employment issue will be somewhat trivial, as we transition to a post-scarcity, fully automated society. Longevity is less a threat to unemployment than automation through AI and robotics (regardless of whether we merge with technology or not - even if we don't, we will still automate all jobs).

  • @danpope3812

    @danpope3812

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ppl are always going to want to compete. Yes we will not be spending our time making houses or fiddeling someones taxes but things like art and sport are the types of jobs ppl enjoy doing and there will be a shortage in these.

  • @pandariuskairos3841

    @pandariuskairos3841

    7 жыл бұрын

    We will automate sports and art too.

  • @danpope3812

    @danpope3812

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure we will but wheres the fun in that? I think you are missiing the point. Just becuse we can does not mean we will. I could go and get all my food placed at my nose if I wanted but I like cooking and I also like to cook for others and others like my cooking. All this could be done for us that does not mean that we would like it that way. Bolt can run very fast but a motabike can travel faster but yet we still watch and enjoy watching a human be the best that humans can be and not all of us will be able to be that good but that does not mean we will not try to be better.

  • @pandariuskairos3841

    @pandariuskairos3841

    7 жыл бұрын

    _Just becuse we can does not mean we will._ No, actually we will. That doesn't mean that people won't be able to do those things, in their own homes or communities, but it will become irrelevant to the economy. Just like you can play chess with your best bud right now, this means nothing to the international chess tournaments. You can throw a football with your buddy in your backyard, or play a game of tag football with your kids at the local park, but you're not going to play in the NFL. Similarly, robotics and AI will take over everything professional. There will be no jobs, menial, intellectual or creative, left for any human to do. Within reasonable limits (that do not use excessive resources or damage the environment) you will still be able to do all those things on your own, it's just that most of the world won't care.

  • @danpope3812

    @danpope3812

    7 жыл бұрын

    This is where I think you are missing the point. 'That doesn't mean that people won't be able to do those things, in their own homes or communities, but it will become irrelevant to the economy.' Please tell me how ppl kicking a ball around helps the economy or mankind in genral. It does not, just the same as the the economy would be no worse off if the mona lisa had never been painted. It is not the fact that thousands of strokes go in to making a painting, it's what the painting means to the person looking at it. You can make a rocket that travels a X mph and that fact can not be contested as to X per £ but a painting or a style of sport are subjective as to how much value ppl place on it. My favortite sports ppl aren't the best at what they do but it's the way they do it that makes me like them. Just because a computer will be able to do everything twice as good, twice as fast does not mean that the value added by something being done by a human, for the sole reseason of doing it, vanishes. Yes we will have robot sporting leagues and human leagues and human vs robot leagues. The point you are making is that if you are not the best at something (that is completely pointless) then you should give up on it and let someone/thing eles do it. That is very sad and ignors human nature. Not only to ppl get a kick out of doing pointless things but other ppl get a kick out of watching other ppl do pointless things. And if the pointless thing happens to be a service I can buy then we have employment.

  • @Gaia_Gaistar
    @Gaia_Gaistar6 жыл бұрын

    I'll see you all in a thousand years from my palace on the moon.

  • @jennyone8829
    @jennyone88292 жыл бұрын

    I love your voice Sir... beautiful in my ears as they ring balance within. Hugs! 🎈

  • @quasarttl
    @quasarttl7 жыл бұрын

    im happy that i found this channel as i gone thru all and literally all available science shows, because during my work (as IT specialist) i tend to listen to any documentaries or science shows and quite frankly this is better than most of the shows with so called super scientists of our age ...

  • @9365fall
    @9365fall7 жыл бұрын

    The sociology problems raised by extended life are way more challenging compared to the problem of achieving extended life. :(

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Oh yes, a lot of them will probably 'sort themselves out' but are likely to do so the way many of our problems have, by coughing and uncomfortably looking the other way while those folks on the rougher side of things 'got sorted'

  • @KManAbout

    @KManAbout

    7 жыл бұрын

    If you think about it, we will be the ruling class of this gerontocracy if we survive until this technology becomes available so we have a duty make sure our descendants will have fulfilling lives. I suggest that sports should be split into ages further. With the same for bands, I also believe that people will still listen to new music and bands because the young still decide the latest culture.

  • @stefanr8232
    @stefanr82327 жыл бұрын

    "releases detailed plans, no patent" :P

  • @astreinerboi
    @astreinerboi7 жыл бұрын

    I like your intros. The presented scenarios always crack me up.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I'm getting fond of doing those, one of the suggestions I got for improving the channel that was a good idea.

  • @grmadomo
    @grmadomo5 жыл бұрын

    Just found Mr Arthur new subscriber, I'm very impressed..thnk u sir.

  • @thli8472
    @thli84727 жыл бұрын

    You can get hundreds of years of interest on your savings account. This could concentrate all resources in the hands of the old

  • @DevilTravels
    @DevilTravels6 жыл бұрын

    We humans tend to be rather abusive to each other and ourselves. 80 years of emotional trauma is hard enough, but 800 years of collective emotional trauma would be impossible to handle. I see no change in humans's desire for abuse no matter how long they live. Life extension technology is likely to advance far faster than humans are capable of evolving emotionally.

  • @johnro3835
    @johnro38357 жыл бұрын

    This channel is gold, it is like all the topics you are interested in, all in one place, amazing, really nice work.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks John!

  • @PaulMnMSmith
    @PaulMnMSmith7 жыл бұрын

    I really can't describe how much i love every video you make

  • @pandariuskairos3841
    @pandariuskairos38417 жыл бұрын

    Biological aging will be ended within 10-15 years, regardless of where we're at today. Once we apply deep learning and even better AI systems to the problem, then it's a simple matter of how long it takes deep learning to collect the data and then solve the problem, which won't be long at all. What people tend to discount is the idea that humans don't have to discover immortality at all, we just need to invent the AI that will do it for us.

  • @Mary42877

    @Mary42877

    7 жыл бұрын

    eh, maybe, but ai isn't magic, you can't just say it'll solve all the problems.

  • @pandariuskairos3841

    @pandariuskairos3841

    7 жыл бұрын

    It will discover all the solutions. It will be up to us to implement those solutions.

  • @Mary42877

    @Mary42877

    7 жыл бұрын

    it will discover nothing unless it's general ai. until then, computers will only be as good as the scientists.

  • @pandariuskairos3841

    @pandariuskairos3841

    7 жыл бұрын

    That is also incorrect. Narrow AI have already been utilized in making novel discoveries. I could provide links if you want.

  • @Mary42877

    @Mary42877

    7 жыл бұрын

    khuh...so you're not just a brainless enthusiast? yes please give me a link!

  • @Avarus-Lux
    @Avarus-Lux7 жыл бұрын

    i would settle for biological immortallity, any time. true immortallity (where your mind isnt taken captive to prevent it from deteriorating) would be awesome, and i'd happily sign for that, but it is as much of a curse as it is a blessing. ( a curse i'd be willing to live with, and yes... eternity is a long incomprehensible time, and it would be my personal hell and heaven...) ps, bare knuckle boxing with a bear FTW, in all seriousness, there might be a new phenomenon to fill the boredom or lack of activities etc, a or The "War(s)for Fun", economically feasible and thrilling for the participants, objectives? could be anything really, capture the white undies on the golden toilet throne for example....

  • @theuncalledfor

    @theuncalledfor

    6 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't want to lose my ability to end my own existence. I would want something in between - a state in which it is damn near impossible to kill or even hurt me from the outside, but if I ever want to stop existing I can still give it up. True, perfectly unkillable immortality would be terrifying. A nightmare.

  • @dias5456
    @dias54567 жыл бұрын

    Discovered this channel about 4 hours ago, its now 3.30am, and i cant stop watching

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Welcome on board, I hope you got some sleep though, the channel isn't going anywhere :)

  • @travishighbaugh5245
    @travishighbaugh52453 жыл бұрын

    Every time he said he couldn't or wouldn't get tired of life it was great. Everyone is always so downtrodden, it's depressing. He is already a genius but still wants more.

  • @charlessmith2643
    @charlessmith26437 жыл бұрын

    one of my concerns would be a monopoly on the drug. Granted the knowledge on how to produce it might be there, but politicians big business have a way of taking things and controlling them. Something should need to be done to prevent monopolizing. Secondly there is already a generation gap between The Young and the old. This could divide people and cause problems. I do think that eventually society would even itself out. Another thing is we've already had life extension. Many years ago the life expectancy of a human being was around 50 years so as time went on a group. I believe now it is considered the life expectancy of a person in America would be around 80 something. I'm using speech to text so if there's any spelling Oddities do forgive me.

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah that's why I skipped that, with the open release, its obviously a concern but its not really a life extension concern, just a general monopoly concern like with an OS, water, power, phones, etc. Big issue but not specifically a life extension issue.

  • @raidermaxx2324

    @raidermaxx2324

    7 жыл бұрын

    Space Oddities??

  • @R.Instro

    @R.Instro

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Charles Smith "The spice must flow!" Good call. +Isaac Arthur Suddenly, the power struggles of the "DUNE" universe look almost plausible. Solutions/complications would be totally speculative, so I get not devoting undue time to it; that's what SF is for!

  • @Ramiromasters
    @Ramiromasters7 жыл бұрын

    Metallica will probably be that 200 year old band still rocking!

  • @isaacarthurSFIA

    @isaacarthurSFIA

    7 жыл бұрын

    One can hope

  • @SailorBarsoom

    @SailorBarsoom

    7 жыл бұрын

    A thousand years of Babymetal!! {ducks and runs}

  • @ianjames6320

    @ianjames6320

    5 жыл бұрын

    I think the rolling stones are giving it a good try

  • @tiagoqueiroz6766
    @tiagoqueiroz67667 жыл бұрын

    What an awesome video! Keep up the good work!

  • @fatetestarossa2774
    @fatetestarossa27747 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video as usual

Келесі