Peter Diamandis and Tony Robbins on strategies that promote longevity now - and in the near future

Ғылым және технология

Dr. Peter Diamandis is a serial entrepreneur and founder of XPRIZE, a non-profit organization that designs and conducts global competitions that incentivize the development of technological breakthroughs that propel humanity toward a better future.
Tony Robbins is an entrepreneur, bestselling author, philanthropist, and business strategist. He provides business and life coaching to millions of people worldwide through his audio programs, educational videos, and live seminars.
EPISODE LINKS:
Show notes and transcript: www.foundmyfitness.com/episod...
"Life Force" Book: www.amazon.com/Life-Force-Bre...
Peter's Longevity Insider newsletter: www.longevityinsider.org/
PODCAST INFO:
Email: www.foundmyfitness.com/newsle...
Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/7gxh...
Full interview playlist: • Interviews
Clips playlist: • FoundMyFitness Clips
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:00:38 - How Tony Robbins and Peter Diamandis met
00:10:58 - Tony and Peter discuss their lifestyle habits
00:22:26 - GRAIL cancer screening blood test
00:23:05 - Cleerly AI-driven coronary CT scan
00:29:02 - The role of DNA damage in aging
00:33:52 - Epigenetics, NAD+, and sirtuins
00:37:32 - Interrupted cellular reprogramming
00:45:14 - Longevity escape velocity
00:50:57 - What do we do after longevity is "solved?"
00:57:00 - Space travel, gene therapy, and organogenesis
01:04:44 - Therapeutic plasma exchange
01:12:32 - 3D printing of complex organs
01:14:29 - Promises and challenges of future technologies
01:17:04 - Age-reversal XPrize
01:19:39 - How mRNA vaccine technology may impact aging
SCIENCE OF HEALTHSPAN EMAIL NEWSLETTER:
Receive emailed episode notifications and regular updates on the emerging science of healthspan. www.foundmyfitness.com/newsle...
SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:
Many of the magnificent resources associated with the FoundMyFitness channel exist directly as a result of our premium membership. As a premium member, listeners get access to our exclusive podcast The Aliquot, monthly Q&As, a special summary of scientific research every other week called the Science Digest, and more. Sign up to become a premium member and nurture the existence of all of the otherwise free resources provided by FoundMyFitness at www.foundmyfitness.com/crowds...
Thank you for watching!
SOCIALS:
/ foundmyfitness
/ foundmyfitness
/ foundmyfitness
PODCAST:
Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/5QjpaU0...
#LifeForce #TonyRobbins #PeterDiamandis

Пікірлер: 110

  • @FoundMyFitness
    @FoundMyFitness2 жыл бұрын

    Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Introduction 00:00:38 - How Tony Robbins and Peter Diamandis met 00:10:58 - Tony and Peter discusses their lifestyle habits 00:22:26 - GRAIL cancer screening blood test 00:23:05 - Cleerly AI-driven coronary CT scan 00:29:02 - The role of DNA damage in aging 00:33:52 - Epigenetics, NAD+, and sirtuins 00:37:32 - Interrupted cellular reprogramming 00:45:14 - Longevity escape velocity 00:50:57 - What do we do after longevity is "solved?" 00:57:00 - Space travel, gene therapy and organogenesis 01:04:44 - Therapeutic plasma exchange 01:12:32 - 3D printing of complex organs 01:14:29 - Promises and challenges of future technologies 01:17:04 - Age-reversal XPrize 01:19:39 - How mRNA vaccine technology may impact aging Hey, guys! If you're interested in knowing literally everything discussed in this episode, make sure to get the full, extended timeline available in our show note at www.foundmyfitness.com/episodes/robbins-diamandis. We do this for literally all of our episodes and it should be a great asset to many of you that might want to get a feel for what's discussed before committing your time towards listening. Additionally, this episode is available as a podcast, like most of our interviews. podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/071-peter-diamandis-md-and-tony-robbins-on-strategies/id818198322?i=1000553468611 Thanks so much for tuning in!

  • @funhistory

    @funhistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, FMF, for providing these time-stamped chapters in your videos. 😀

  • @mikect05

    @mikect05

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is a disappointing video Dr. Patrick. This is more of an infomercial and not what I've come to love and respect from you. David Sinclair is showing himself to not have ethics. These guys clearly don't value truthful communication, they are bombastic, stretch truth, and speak of the hypothetical as established science.

  • @sandracollins347

    @sandracollins347

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mikect05 totally agree

  • @AD-cy7wx
    @AD-cy7wx2 жыл бұрын

    They started talking the Miracles of NMN and Dr Patrik was like “pump the brakes boys.” 😂❤️❤️

  • @georgewines8940
    @georgewines89402 жыл бұрын

    Dr. Rhonda, this sort of info for healthspan and longevity is really great. I don't think anybody you have interviewed have directly touched on how to keep teeth and gums from what is seen as normal wear and tear. When somebody lives to be much older, how can they keep their teeth to be similar to people in their 30s like the rest of these lifestyle changes and supplements are allowing? Can you do a podcast or aliquot on that?

  • @SkyRiver1
    @SkyRiver12 жыл бұрын

    Unlike what Tony said, several nmn supplements were found to contain the amount they claimed. This whole thing sounds so much like a infomercial.

  • @boydhooper4080
    @boydhooper40802 жыл бұрын

    If we had more people like Peter the world would be a much better place. The epitome of applied intelligence !

  • @MrKen59
    @MrKen592 жыл бұрын

    The trick to this is access. Who, What, Where and how much. I did the rotator cuff surgery and not good, listened to a podiatrist who said the can “fix” my foot and now I’m stuck in worse shape. I agree with using this technology, but how to get it is the challenge. The one thing I’ve learned in 60+ years is to find what’s creating an issue and give your body a chance to heal. The pain is learning the lesson after you let someone “fix” you only to have it irreparable.

  • @S1T2A3N
    @S1T2A3N2 жыл бұрын

    I love Dr. Patrick's presentations because they are intensive and very densely packed with very valuable information. Those chatting guys might be good for somebody in need of motivational speech. I quit listening realizing I have better use of my time.

  • @scottflyey

    @scottflyey

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you had endured the pep talk motivational aspect of Tony Robbins a little longer you would have found that and there were a number of very practical actions brought out in the stories told that people can do to improve and rejuvenate their health.

  • @bepperson885
    @bepperson8852 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy information that normal folks can use in everyday life who don't have access to exceptional excess of financial capital. For us regulars who just want to optimize our and our patient's health, this was a little out of reach and offered little in practical information. Space travel is off limits to the majority of Americans, and so are most of the annual "Uploading" technologies mentioned. We can't even get mono-clonal antibodies in Washington state. This one was not my cup of tea.

  • @mikelowrey1910
    @mikelowrey19102 жыл бұрын

    Longevity? Thats great! I’ve always wanted to be longer.

  • @boriszolah3770

    @boriszolah3770

    2 жыл бұрын

    lul good one :D

  • @jdt2003
    @jdt20032 жыл бұрын

    Any of the ~20 doctors I've been to in life never mention anything akin to what Dr Patrick, Tony, and Peter talk about.

  • @rinhmuseum

    @rinhmuseum

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is cutting edge and a lot of this is IP under development. Methods are not taught in public schools, but in labs and industry. There are a lot of subfields to medicine.

  • @SkyRiver1

    @SkyRiver1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like the norm to me. Most doctors know almost nothing about nutrition and couldn't care less about learning anything about it. Yet they are considered authorities on nutrition by most people. You can be a bad doctor and sill make money, you cannot be a bad scientist and be successful unless you are tailoring evidence to fit the requirement of some corporation.

  • @ye.katerina
    @ye.katerina2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing info, THANK YOU! 🙏🏼

  • @susymay7831
    @susymay78312 жыл бұрын

    Great timestamps!

  • @marijusofficial
    @marijusofficial2 жыл бұрын

    That was phenomenal conversation.

  • @scottk1525
    @scottk15252 жыл бұрын

    Lately it seems like whenever a podcast has a slot to fill, regardless of the niche, they'll just book Tony Robbins. What is his expertise again? Pep talks?

  • @dapawap
    @dapawap2 жыл бұрын

    WOW I watch all David’s vids & have ordered his book.

  • @AM-xh6sk
    @AM-xh6sk2 жыл бұрын

    Nice to have someone like Robbins synthesizing longevity science. Can have a huge impact.

  • @ellencollins4528
    @ellencollins45282 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. But, for instance, this PCKS9 vaccine, that lowers cholesterol? Well, recent thinking is not vilifying cholesterol in and of itself---or even LDL cholesterol--as much as in the past. In the absence of inflammation, cholesterol itself is not necessarily harmful and might even be helpful. For instance cholesterol proffers immunity. Also, the treatment ignores the fact that high cholesterol is inversely related to all cause mortality in the elderly... So it's a little bit worrisome to "protect" us against health situations that may later be found to not be the culprits at all. Just a thought.

  • @UHFStation1
    @UHFStation12 жыл бұрын

    Interesting. Where can an average Joe find stem cells if they don't have a placenta laying around?

  • @swenic
    @swenic2 жыл бұрын

    Great episode! He looks like he's related to (or a clone of) Jean Claude van Damme!

  • @andrewzanas9387
    @andrewzanas93872 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Rhonda. Happy to see it start with what initially brought these two people together. We don't often associate Tony Robbins with genomic breakthroughs, or in thinking anthropologically beyond biomedical and natural evolutionary advancements. It was important to hear that Tony's still growing in bringing the whole mind/body paradigm together in order to explore, associate and extend our longevity and health from an ontological perspective. Peter's new to me. We want to hear more. I'm still not sold on the rush to adopt iMra and CRISPR technology the way it was jammed down our throats by creating novel gain-of-function lethal viruses first and then purposely releasing them into the wild. It's pretty much a given now when Victoria Newland's public revelation acknowledged the US had established 26 biomedical research labs in the Ukraine alone, and another 300 in 30 other countries. We can't ignore it, however it's great to hear there are companies working on eradicating diseases and people like Peter who are willing to do much more than just talk about it. (Correction and Apologies. Victoria Newland, not Cynthia.)

  • @peterz53
    @peterz532 жыл бұрын

    1h5m on plasma exchange it would be good to get someone who really knows something, like the Conboys, Tom Rando, Tony Wyss-Corey, etc. This could be something that is easily actionable without needing deep pockets and waiting for a new product. Over-boarding old plasma, to reduce excess bad proteins and increase youthful gene expression, can be done now at plasma donation centers and to some degree at blood donation centers (by way of plasma or platelet donation instead of whole blood).

  • @FoundMyFitness

    @FoundMyFitness

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'd love to have a conversation on that. Will keep in mind. Thanks for the suggestion.

  • @jshtaway1
    @jshtaway1 Жыл бұрын

    "Optimists live longer" is true, but is it optimism that provides health? Or health that provides optimism? I know I feel much happier after a good nights sleep. Did my nights sleep cause me to be happy the next day? Or did the next day's happiness provide last nights good sleep?

  • @funhistory
    @funhistory2 жыл бұрын

    UGH!!! I was so relieved to get all zeroes for my CT calcification scan last year, but at 23:41, "You've seen people with a zero calcium score having a heart attack..."

  • @sandracollins347

    @sandracollins347

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I had a CAC 3 years ago which was zero. I also had an IMT which showed soft placque and have high cholesterol apo B but don’t want to go on a statin. Try getting an IMT?

  • @mikect05
    @mikect052 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I can't really believe Tony Robbins when in one minute he says: He jumps 1000x in a day, he has 99.9% higher bone density than they've ever measured .. 25 lbs more lean muscle mass then the average NFL lineman, lactic acid @ 18 and talking, he had the highest mercury level they've ever tested in NY... Etc, etc....

  • @johnny7808

    @johnny7808

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bill Brasky syndrome

  • @ellencollins4528

    @ellencollins4528

    2 жыл бұрын

    Right?!?!? haha

  • @jpintero6330

    @jpintero6330

    2 жыл бұрын

    99.9% higher bone density! Such BS!

  • @omararreola5449
    @omararreola54492 жыл бұрын

    This field is so bipolar one minute there’s a video that nmn does not work and other videos that it’s the next big thing man I wish scientist and doctors and researchers and other got together and debated to see where the consensus is and make our own minds up

  • @mikect05

    @mikect05

    2 жыл бұрын

    There are ethical and unethical people. Most have an agenda, these two guys are clearly pushing their snake oil. NMN does show promise but we need more good studies. Resveratrol is bunk, and Sinclair is a scammer. Rapamycin looks very promising! I see an unsettling trend of smart doctors and scientists perfectly happy to go along with the rest of the world and scam as many people as possible and have some wealth and land for their kids & grandkids for when the world collapses in the many ways that we are racing towards.

  • @pdmaven

    @pdmaven

    2 жыл бұрын

    Rather than waiting for a dr. to tell you what to do (they don't know much about health and agin g and latest therapies), try nmn for 1-3 months and see what it can do for you. I am doing that with D3, Ashwaganda, resveratrol, NAD and AMPK supplements.

  • @SkyRiver1

    @SkyRiver1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pdmaven Best to keep your resveratrol below 400ml per day.

  • @susymay7831
    @susymay78312 жыл бұрын

    Where can we get a GRAIL cancer test?

  • @FoundMyFitness

    @FoundMyFitness

    2 жыл бұрын

    Here it is! grail.com/ You can find more details about this episode in the show notes: www.foundmyfitness.com/episodes/robbins-diamandis

  • @susymay7831

    @susymay7831

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@FoundMyFitness Thank you!

  • @dapawap
    @dapawap2 жыл бұрын

    Poor animals

  • @annedonato1079
    @annedonato1079 Жыл бұрын

    how about cost/insurance

  • @jimdandy8996
    @jimdandy89962 жыл бұрын

    So if we used the Mederna and Pfizer delivery techniques will we see athletes and others collapse on their feet, etc after being injected?

  • @bouwebear597
    @bouwebear597 Жыл бұрын

    52:44 I just watched that episode of Twilight Zone literally the other day. It is in season 1, I think.

  • @CrumbleLives
    @CrumbleLives2 жыл бұрын

    ‘Sugar causes cardiac disease’ any references to that please?

  • @Keyno77

    @Keyno77

    2 жыл бұрын

    I cant remember where I heard or this but sugars are rapid available fuels that if not used right away the body converts them into fats and fats correlate with heart disease because they clog passages for blood flow and many other reasons

  • @mikect05

    @mikect05

    2 жыл бұрын

    Rhonda has talked about fat globulin size. Small fat globulin in your blood is what is really bad and this comes from sugar.

  • @CrumbleLives

    @CrumbleLives

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mikect05 Thanks. I know that fat cell growth via hypertrophy (big rather than small fat cells) is bad and can lead to insulin resistance and that’s driven by ceramides which result from inflammation and that logic could point to insulin resistance, which in turn may point to to high sugar diets, etc. But I’m looking for the scientific pubs that directly back up that sugar causes cardiac disease as stated by Peter Diamandis.

  • @ste-fi1qy
    @ste-fi1qy2 жыл бұрын

    Is there any way to synthesis stem cells in a lab?

  • @FoundMyFitness

    @FoundMyFitness

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes! They're called induced pluripotent stem cells. We talk about that a bit in this conversation, as well as on other videos. Worth a google, though. See also the episodes with Dr. David Sinclair, and the one with Dr. Steve Horvath. David Sinclair: kzread.info/dash/bejne/Z3ioudOzkc-rnsY.html Steve Horvath: kzread.info/dash/bejne/c5OVw6SEpcWwnqQ.html

  • @ste-fi1qy

    @ste-fi1qy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@FoundMyFitness sweet thanks

  • @deanervik
    @deanervik Жыл бұрын

    Wow

  • @martdag1950
    @martdag19502 жыл бұрын

    That’s awesome!

  • @samshrivastava2655
    @samshrivastava26552 жыл бұрын

    OMG. Daily mail talked about it. 🤣 Hints of …..clue to……buyer beware.

  • @jpintero6330
    @jpintero63302 жыл бұрын

    Just do everything Chuando Tan does

  • @dapawap
    @dapawap2 жыл бұрын

    I have had a torn rotator cuff for years, are there doctors in Australia who can inject some placenta material into the rotator cuff? ATM I am having PRP injections, & I read somewhere where they don’t work so sadlyI am believing that literature instead of believing they will work. 😹

  • @andy_ppp
    @andy_ppp2 жыл бұрын

    How do stem cells from a placenta (that is presumably not Tony’s) work in his body? I don’t get it - shouldn’t your body be rejecting cells from other people and do you want brain cells, heart cells etc. made by these “foreign” stem cells? Does anyone know?

  • @DrDadjoo

    @DrDadjoo

    2 жыл бұрын

    They briefly mentioned that they are “pre-thymic” and thus don’t register as foreign antigens. I understood this to mean pluripotent placental stem cells are so immature and malleable that they don’t yet have the surface proteins and sugars which identify it. However, I was also very keen to hear more about this. Did anyone else pick up on this? Thank you.

  • @austinmarshall3030
    @austinmarshall30302 жыл бұрын

    this is FIRE! Probably some of the smartest health minds alive....follow all these humans

  • @Nadine-mc8dx
    @Nadine-mc8dx2 жыл бұрын

    I'm Soo interested in this!! I'm in pain ALWAYS.. I couldn't even imagine what I could be doing out of pain!!! I have a four pin rod fused to my lower back could this be a possibility to take out my rods and pain free???? CAUSE if SOO 💜😊😊💜💜😊😊 😘 I'm rocking on board.. if not I'm still on board just no dancing.. I WANT TO DANCE

  • @theycallmedip
    @theycallmedip2 жыл бұрын

    Well this is a crossover I wasn't expecting. Just shows your the real deal when Tony is in your company who really only messes with the absolute experts. Congrats Dr. Rhonda!

  • @travelingecho
    @travelingecho2 жыл бұрын

    Ronda this channel is such a hidden jem

  • @deeperinwards
    @deeperinwards2 жыл бұрын

    What do I do with nutrition, carry on being a (by and large organic whole foods) fully plant-based eater, not eating vegan processed/packaged foods, but purely whole plant-based foods as an eater who has genuinely healthy vegan foods (while being mindful of Omega 6 oils and my Omega 3:6 ratio, supplementing with further algae Omega 3), and trying to be ketogenic, being a bit of a keto-vegan biohacker (and I'm fully vegan/plant-based solely for health reasons and health optimisation, to avoid animal-derived proteins and IGF-1 ageing triggers, and to follow the advice of Dr Michael Greger), or do I do what the other camp/group/band of biohackers do for health optimisation and have high-quality meats like wild caught Alaskan salmon and pasture raised meats in combination with other plant-based healthy foods like all the vegetables and low-sugar berries out there, and avoiding mould-prone, avoiding carb-high (I already avoid Glycemic Index-high foods) and anti-nutrient and carb-rich foods (at least by soaking and cleaning up/clearing the phytic acid on legumes, for example, to minimise anti-nutrients)? Which group of health optimisers are closer to what is effectual in reality, the healthy vegan eaters like myself and Michael Greger or the strictly high-quality-meat-and-greens eaters like Dave Asprey or Tim Biohacker?

  • @ed7187

    @ed7187

    2 жыл бұрын

    Michel gregor looks worse then all the biohackers and tony robbins 🤔

  • @deeperinwards

    @deeperinwards

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ed7187 Seriously, do you truly believe so? I mean, I am very lost with whether how I eat is truly the best way for my health, and I am scared about returning to eating meat (high-quality meats) if I ever were to 'biohack' in the supposed way the meat-and-greens health-oriented persons of the world do it, when apparently and in my opinion a smart and all-encompassing fully plant-based diet is optimal/the very best thing for your longevity

  • @ed7187

    @ed7187

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deeperinwards i was eating fully wfpb for 5 years a struggled to maintain weight. I added 100% CALIFORNIA extra virgin olive oil and its helping me not have that gaunt vegan look. I also recently started to add collagen and my skin looks better. Apart from that i cycle creatine, taurine, carnitine, NAC because vegan diet lacks them. Apart from that omega 3s, b12, zinc, selenium, and cal/mag. I feel better than when i followed michael gregors advice of only eating wfpb plus b12. Im still predominantly vegan apart from fish oil and collagen

  • @SkyRiver1

    @SkyRiver1

    2 жыл бұрын

    I do the same, except I do not avoid complex carbs, like steel cut oats. On the other hand I never eat bread or cake or any of the other processed high glycemic index carbs. Carbs are good for you. All the longest lived populations of earth have high carb diets. But aside from epigenetic studies that actually show higher mortality with low carb diets, I do not think you are hurting yourself a lot. It's not like you are maintaining ketosis or anything. That can probably be harmful if maintained for a long period. Fortunately most people who think they are in ketosis are really not. Other than that I say you are an example of the very best diet.

  • @hulksmash4311
    @hulksmash43112 жыл бұрын

    Placebo really works?

  • @megm.c4026
    @megm.c40262 жыл бұрын

    Interesting, but also feels like medical care/health for the rich to me. None of these things are really even an option for many. Us lesser beings are just surviving best we can and no way can we access this stuff. Being chronically ill and KNOWING that if you had money you could get your health back is where many many people I know live. Its not helpful in recovery for us. Sadly., I dont see this as being the fix for humanity. We all go or no one does...in my humble opinion.

  • @willow05

    @willow05

    2 жыл бұрын

    agreed. These new advancements are amazing, but if mere mortals never get access to them...what's the point? They need to be cost effective and integrated into our healthcare systems

  • @ed7187

    @ed7187

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fasting and calorie restriction. Give you lots of the same benefits and youll save money doing this. Eating beans and rice instead of meat will save you money and youll live longer. Taking a jog, doing calisthenics, sleeping on circadian, getting early morning sunlight, sleeping in darkness, spending time in nature, grounding to the earth, meditation/yoga, breathing exercises, stretching(good for blood vessels), and finally gratitude/prayer/forgiveness ...are all free or cheap to implement and will give you most of the benefits these expensive biohacks will 😉

  • @sandracollins347
    @sandracollins3472 жыл бұрын

    I wish Rhonda Patrick could be my Dx! Amazing info of what I have learned from her. I am having however, having a difficult time listening to 2 rich men who can afford $$$$$ that the rest of us cannot afford and love to hear themselves talk about how much they know- total informercial. . I want to see their claims backed up by science. For instance CAC score of 1000 is good? Really. I don’t think Dr Peter Attia would agree that anything over 0 would be good. Do an IMT which is a low cost test that finds soft plaques. Not the best utube for me and hope Dr Patrick sticks with ppl who are credible. As a female engineer the “mansplaining” is very annoying

  • @sandracollins347

    @sandracollins347

    2 жыл бұрын

    I also love how both of these pseudo scientists are mansplaining Dr Patrick. The placebos are strong with both of these. Btw-David Sinclair has been called out by other very credible scientists on data manipulation and other shady scientific issues. Money is a big driver for him.

  • @andrefrancis613

    @andrefrancis613

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sandracollins347 woke folks I tell ya

  • @pdmaven

    @pdmaven

    2 жыл бұрын

    Joe Rogan has interviewed Rhonda Patrick a few times. All were outstanding podcasts. I found them on youtube.

  • @4zembaii4
    @4zembaii42 жыл бұрын

    Good; thank you

  • @msdaus14
    @msdaus142 жыл бұрын

    But who can afford this stuff? Let’s fix wealth inequality before making rich super humans.

  • @reformedchinesecommunist

    @reformedchinesecommunist

    2 жыл бұрын

    The fact that both of those things are currently mutually exclusive is probably not a mistake

  • @johnnightly5281

    @johnnightly5281

    2 жыл бұрын

    Begin to use your brain and work hard, the money will come. Being lazy and jealous gets you exactly what you deserve.

  • @willow05

    @willow05

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnnightly5281 this is a bullshit reply. Not everyone has the mental capacity to earn the kind of money that these treatments and tests cost. Bottom, line is, most of the world's population are working HARD at minimum wage jobs (the kind of basic jobs that keep the country running) and shouldn't be punished for that, by not having access to advanced healthcare, A chain is only as strong as it's weakest link..help EVRYONE get healthy and we will all benefit.

  • @johnnightly5281

    @johnnightly5281

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@willow05 oh right right everyone should be equal. So, work hard to pay my bills thank you Mr. generosity :)

  • @wildcatR4WR

    @wildcatR4WR

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnnightly5281 A person that is a lot bellow average in any sense will make a crazy larger amount of money living in a rich country than a genius will make if born in a fucked up country.

  • @jshtaway1
    @jshtaway1 Жыл бұрын

    "Turns out we were never engineered to live past age 30" Is a random guess, but you state it as fact. If we weren't then we'd be dead @ 30, not slowly disregulating like you said. I think a culture gets a lot of value from the wisdom and history that our elders have. You don't JUST have to have babies to be valuable to a culture. And it bothers me when people say random things that pop into their minds as facts. Who knows how far that "fact" will travel from you, and what damage it will do to respect for the value of our elders. How wise were you before 30 compared to now? Dont you think your existence still provides value to all of us? **eye roll

  • @crinsb
    @crinsb2 жыл бұрын

    "Longevity Escape Velocity" is mathematical gibberish because life expectancy is at birth and so any increase in it is captured less and less as we age. Someone aged 60 for example will only gain a fraction of a year for every extra year of LE.

  • @rinhmuseum

    @rinhmuseum

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don’t think it is. It is a valid idea and will be realized.

  • @ckleith2761

    @ckleith2761

    2 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps compare the extended life expectancy to the actuarial life expectancy remaining at your then age. A 70 year old with 16 years until half of the age cohort is dead.... use that to base the LE factor impact. Your thoughts?

  • @pt10981
    @pt109812 жыл бұрын

    So much hype; so little time.

  • @suzanneoneill8102
    @suzanneoneill81022 жыл бұрын

    Really interesting talk - so interesting to see what is around the corner from a medical point of view. There does however need to be an emphasis on the ethical implications of all this progress, particularly when human beings have not demonstrated the necessary focus on equality to date (some people still don't have access to the COVID 19 vaccine). Also will we be around as a species given our capacity to tackle climate change and our tendency towards violence and war? Sorry to put a dampener on such an interesting discussion.

  • @pdmaven

    @pdmaven

    2 жыл бұрын

    As with any new technology and breakthroughs, the wealthy usually have access first. Think I-phone, autos, ear buds, teslas, etc. If they accept it, according to Malcolm Gladwell, you reach a tipping pt at about 15% -- where the general public begins to accept the new technology. At that point it can be mass produced bringing the price down.

  • @NomadicLiving
    @NomadicLiving Жыл бұрын

    First off, I think science is exciting and fantastic. It would be wonderful, except frequently, discoveries like these get abused and mishandled. What will we do with people living forever in a world that cannot sustain us? As much as the subject was touched on, 'well, we need people to work, and our population is in decline - this is not true globally. We have homeless people who can't get by; they aren't happy, healthy worker bees. Thus far, they haven't been offered jobs with a living wage and taken off the streets. I believe this will most likely be for the very wealthy and a select few enslaved people to sustain the 1%. So far, humanity has not shown itself to be more gregarious than tyrannical.

Келесі