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The Fountain of Youth

The Fountain of Youth

Cultural, scientific and ethical perspectives on a biomedical goal

9780195170085
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Description
A wide variety of ambitions and measures to slow, stop, and reverse phenomena associated with ageing have been part of human culture since early civilization. From alchemy to cell injections to dietary supplements, the list of techniques aimed at altering the processes of ageing continues to expand. Charlatans, quacks and entrepreneurs proffering anti-ageing products and practices have always exploited uniformed customers and instilled doubt and apprehension toward practicesintended to extend life. Recently, however, the pursuit of longevity has developed into a respectable scientific activity. Many biologists are substantially funded by the government and the private sector to conduct research that they believe will lead to effective anti-ageing interventions. While many embrace this quest for prolongevity - extended youth and long life - others fear its consequences. If effective anti-ageing interventions were achieved, they would likely bring about profound alterations in the experiences of individual and collective life. What if ageing could be decelerated to the extent that both average life expectancy and maximum life span would increase by forty percent? What if all humans could live to be centenarians, free of the chronic diseases anddisabilities now commonly associated with old age? What if modern scientists could find the modern equivalent to the Fountain of Youth that Ponce de Leon sought? This book addresses these questions by exploring the ramifications of possible anti-ageing interventions on both individual and collective life. Through a series of essays, it examines the biomedical goal of prolongevity from cultural, scientific, religious and ethical perspectives, offering a sweeping view into the future of ageing.
Product Details
OUP USA
85271
9780195170085
9780195170085

Data sheet

Publication date
2004
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
496
Dimensions (mm)
163 x 241
Weight (g)
842
  • Introduction; Part I: The Perennial Quests for Extended and Eternal Life; The search for prolongevity: a continuous pursuit; The quest for immortality: visions and presentiments in science and literature; Decelerated ageing: should I drink from a Fountain of Youth?; A Jewish theology of death and the afterlife; In defence of immortality; Part II: The Science of Prolongevity; In search of the Holy Grail of senescence; The metabiology of life extension; Extending human longevity: a biological probability; Eat less, eat better, and live longer: does it work and is it worth it?: the role of diet in ageing and disease; Extending life: scientific prospects and political obstacles; An engineers approach to developing real anti-ageing medicine; Part III: Ethical and Social Perspectives on Radical Life Extension; An unnatural process: why it is not inherently wrong to seek a cure for ageing; Longevity, identity and moral character: a feminist approach; LChaim and its limits: why not immortality?; Anti-ageing research and the limits of medicine; The social and justice implications of extending the human life span; The prolonged old, the long-lived society and the politics of age; Epilogue: extended life, eternal life: a Christian perspective;
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