Gerald P Creel Jr Longevity
Produktbeskrivelse
Longevity: Philosophy of Aging, Life Extension, and Mortality What happens when death becomes optional? For the first time in human history, we stand at the threshold of radical life extension. Companies like Calico Labs and Altos Labs are investing billions in aging research, with breakthrough therapies suggesting we may achieve "longevity escape velocity"-where life expectancy increases faster than chronological aging-within 15-20 years. Yet while science races toward extending human lifespans to 150 years or beyond, philosophy has remained largely silent about what such extended existence might mean. Longevity fills this critical gap, offering the first comprehensive philosophical analysis of extended longevity and its implications for human civilization. Author Gerald Creel presents a provocative investigation that challenges every assumption about life, death, and meaning in an age of technological transcendence. The Death of Death Creel begins with a startling recognition: death as philosophy has understood it for millennia no longer exists. Every philosophical system from Socrates to Sartre assumed mortality as the unchanging foundation of human existence. When that foundation transforms, the entire framework of human meaning becomes incomprehensible. The Mathematics of Choice A 150-year life involves approximately two billion decisions-a scale of choice accumulation that exceeds human cognitive capacities evolved for traditional lifespans. This "numerical sublime" reveals extended longevity's deepest challenge: not whether consciousness can survive longer, but whether it possesses sufficient intensity to justify such duration. The Democratic Crisis Extended longevity threatens to shatter the existential solidarity that shared mortality has provided throughout human history. When some humans escape the mortality that defines the human condition while others remain mortal, we face humanity's first genuine caste system based on relationship to existence itself. The K-Curve of Human Experience Mathematical analysis reveals that extended longevity creates divergent life trajectories-some individuals accumulating vast advantages across multiple domains while others experience prolonged disadvantage, generating inequality that exceeds anything previous civilizations have produced. Drawing on Continental philosophy, cognitive science, and practical policy analysis, Creel demonstrates that meaningful extended longevity requires not just technological capability but social transformation. The book concludes with the paradox that authentic longevity may require preserving chosen mortality-transforming death from biological inevitability into conscious choice. This groundbreaking work provides essential frameworks for navigating humanity's most significant transition, determining whether extended longevity enhances or destroys human flourishing across temporal horizons that approach geological significance. Essential reading for anyone concerned with the future of human existence.
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