Message from @seler
Discord ID: 448534966163210262
they did it once my mum(the youngest o their kids) turned 18 I think
I think mine did too
its a reasonable thing to do
death depresses me
immortality when
pretty soon
I give it 0 years
40*
the thing is we will be old by then
aging will be stopped before then ofc
tbh I don't think it'll come so fast but again
future is unpredictable
you'd have people in the past predicting that by 2018 we surely would have flying cars and vast colonies on Mars or something
they didn't predict the Internet tho, no one knows really
ye but these people were dumb obv
i am smart
this
yeah
Immortality, best case scenario: 2045.
I honestly think it would be easier to discover how to make people immortal than to find "cure for cancer"
not because it would be so easy to attain immortality, but that it's going to be so fucking hard to cure every kind of cancer
so if people became immortal, they'd still die from cancer eventually
ummm
but that are related things
cancer probability grows with age
and you can't really call yourself "immortal" if you die of cancer at 80
sure, that's why I'm saying curing cancer is harder, because you don't die "from old age", but because something is failing you
if you stop ageing you stop the single most important cause of cancer
old age = many things are failing
these things are inherently intertwined
you'd need a perfect replication system for your body cells to be immortal and that would also mean a perfect cancer (sorry for my kindergarten understanding of biology)
what
cancer is basically your cells going haywire, right
?
if they were able to replicate perfectly, but not perfectly enough for something to go wrong, wouldn't that cause the nastiest imaginable cancer?
no, biological immortality doesn't imply cancer, not at all
there are organisms that are biologically immortal and they don't really die of cancer
it's not that much about perfect replicating
ageing is a complex process but i.e one of the direct causes are telemeres(the ending part of DNA) getting shorter and shorter with every replication
telomeres are meant to protect the genetic material, but with age they slowly dissappear