Sunday, April 7, 2013
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Outside Looking In
How far away do we need to go before we disappear? How grounded are we in the context of our own viewpoints? Being stuck in a small space it is easy to forget our special place. With larger and larger contexts we gain the viewpoints that allow us to understand ourselves better.
Our Dwellings
Our eyes are mostly focused on what is only a few meters in front of us. Very rarely do we look farther away. Most of our lives are spent looking on the plane of the earth's surface.
Even going up a few hundred meters changes our perspective on where we are.
It's oddness and rarity challenge our contextual view.
From this viewpoint, it is fairly easy to discern much about what goes on. Cars on roads, the shape and size of houses, trees positioned for effect, and little tubes sticking up from roofs for heating all give clues to the lives visible here.
Humans have seen views from mountains and hills that gave them this perspective for millennia. Our cultures developed allowing us to see this view of ourselves.
Our minds can easily make this context shift as it remains within our daily understanding of our existence.
Our Communities
Moving upward to a thousand meters gives us a broader perspective on human existence. The context of our lives becomes more apparent. We can see the places where we work and play.
The infrastructure that supports our lives, the highways we travel upon, the shopping centers we accumulate from, and the parks we play in are easily understood.
Our individuality begins to disappear at this level. The community that was here before us and will be after us begins to become dominate.
While we can see the structure our lives exist in, our self identity is merged into thousands of others. Persons become peoples.
It is easy to pick out the markers around us that give us our identity at this elevation. The groups of people we classify ourselves with can be determined. My neighborhood, their neighborhood, that 'other' neighborhood can be divided in our brains.
This perspective of human lives became possible with development of balloons. We have had this view of ourselves for only a few generations, a couple of lifespans at most.
Our Areas
Going farther upward we begin to lose sight of lives as individuals at all. Our communities are still apparent, but hard to tell apart.
Our eyes are attracted to the changes in color and straight lines. Roads allow us to differentiate between things, even our governmental structures are still apparent looking down from here.
Where our food is grown, where our water comes from, and the transportation network we use to move our goods about show us how our society is organized.
Those things we identify with closely are hard to delimit. Which high school sports team we root for, our daily commutes, even the places we were born or go after death are merged until we can not perceive them at all.
Viewing our areas of habitation from this altitude began with airplanes. My grandparents knew a time when such a perspective was a new idea.
Our Regions
Going higher yet, our communities disappear, merging into a blur of geographic features.
With some attention to detail we can still tell that organized beings exist in these places. Large plantings by farmers, dams on rivers, even bigger towns can be noted.
It would be easy to deduce that life and even intelligent life existed on the surface far below. The effects of their actions can be determined; the level of technological progress even estimated.
Looking down upon a region became possible with the Space Race. When I was a child, mankind first became able to envision an entire region in a single glance.
Our Nations
Moving farther up again national borders vanish. Our training from maps may allow us to pick out where one nation begins and another ends, but to an alien visitor, these divisions of land would not exist.
It is still possible to make out that intelligent beings thrive on the surface of this planet, farming, pollution, and other large scale environmental effects of humans can be made out.
A technological civilization is clear in the light spectrum during night time still.
Concentrations of energy use show how the beings on the planet gather in centers and along coast lines.
A visitor could figure out that these beings use water and land both.
Some kind of organizational structure must exist for the creatures inhabiting this place in order for such massive use of energy.
Before we even reach a hundred kilometers in the sky, our nation states disappear from view.
Our Planet
When we move up far enough to take in the whole planet, it is still possible to see that our human species exists. The lights of civilization burn bright in some spectra at night.
Individuals, communities, cities, and nations all fuse together. Any sense of identity beyond 'humanity' has no real meaning from this distance.
The weather patterns of the globe are much more dominate visually. Vast expanses of mountain, desert and ocean divide the planet's surface.
The first images of the entire planet came to us in startling rush. As the Apollo astronauts rocketed towards the moon, a large chunk of the humanity watched these initial views of our shared globe on their televisions together.
Our Earth/Moon
As space craft move away from earth and moon to distant planets in the solar system, we saw images giving us a context of our largest familiar identity.
Land masses, oceans and feint weather patterns are all that can be seen.
The lights of our cities fade from view at this distance. It is no longer possible to tell if intelligent life exists on the little balls floating in space.
Individuals and nations seem to have no meaning from this height. The most important things in our daily lives do not register even faintly.
Our Solar System
As the Cassini spacecraft orbits Saturn, we see the earth and moon as a single, remote dot.
The very existence of the planet comes to our awareness only if we observe keenly.
If we were to listen to the radio waves, only faint traces of human activity can be heard.
At this height, all that we ever were and all that we are barely registers in the universe.
Voyager Beyond
Our most remote spacecraft is Voyager 1, launched in the late 1970's. It sent this image of earth from the very edge of the solar system.
From six billion kilometers away, the earth is not even visible anymore. Two magnifications are embedded into the photograph. One is of the region of Venus. The other is of the region of earth. Neither planet is visible even when zoomed into to the highest amount possible.
Our light giving and life sustaining star, the sun, appears tiny, its features indistinguishable.
Unique, Special and Valuable
As far as we know, there is no other intelligent life in the universe. Even if there are beings who are like us, such beings are very, very rare.
I often close my eyes and try to imagine this greater context. Stepping up and away from that which is immediately visible allows a sense of humility to fill me. The awesome uniqueness of my existence makes it more precious than I am able to imagine. My frustrations and even my joys dissipate at the wonder of it all.
Our Dwellings
![]() |
My house from a couple of hundred meters up |
Our eyes are mostly focused on what is only a few meters in front of us. Very rarely do we look farther away. Most of our lives are spent looking on the plane of the earth's surface.
Even going up a few hundred meters changes our perspective on where we are.
It's oddness and rarity challenge our contextual view.
From this viewpoint, it is fairly easy to discern much about what goes on. Cars on roads, the shape and size of houses, trees positioned for effect, and little tubes sticking up from roofs for heating all give clues to the lives visible here.
Humans have seen views from mountains and hills that gave them this perspective for millennia. Our cultures developed allowing us to see this view of ourselves.
Our minds can easily make this context shift as it remains within our daily understanding of our existence.
Our Communities
Moving upward to a thousand meters gives us a broader perspective on human existence. The context of our lives becomes more apparent. We can see the places where we work and play.
![]() |
My town from a couple kilometers up |
Our individuality begins to disappear at this level. The community that was here before us and will be after us begins to become dominate.
While we can see the structure our lives exist in, our self identity is merged into thousands of others. Persons become peoples.
It is easy to pick out the markers around us that give us our identity at this elevation. The groups of people we classify ourselves with can be determined. My neighborhood, their neighborhood, that 'other' neighborhood can be divided in our brains.
This perspective of human lives became possible with development of balloons. We have had this view of ourselves for only a few generations, a couple of lifespans at most.
Our Areas
Going farther upward we begin to lose sight of lives as individuals at all. Our communities are still apparent, but hard to tell apart.
![]() |
My area from a dozen of kilometers up |
Where our food is grown, where our water comes from, and the transportation network we use to move our goods about show us how our society is organized.
Those things we identify with closely are hard to delimit. Which high school sports team we root for, our daily commutes, even the places we were born or go after death are merged until we can not perceive them at all.
Viewing our areas of habitation from this altitude began with airplanes. My grandparents knew a time when such a perspective was a new idea.
![]() |
My region from around 20 kilometers up |
Going higher yet, our communities disappear, merging into a blur of geographic features.
With some attention to detail we can still tell that organized beings exist in these places. Large plantings by farmers, dams on rivers, even bigger towns can be noted.
It would be easy to deduce that life and even intelligent life existed on the surface far below. The effects of their actions can be determined; the level of technological progress even estimated.
Looking down upon a region became possible with the Space Race. When I was a child, mankind first became able to envision an entire region in a single glance.
![]() |
Europe from 50 kilometers up |
Moving farther up again national borders vanish. Our training from maps may allow us to pick out where one nation begins and another ends, but to an alien visitor, these divisions of land would not exist.
It is still possible to make out that intelligent beings thrive on the surface of this planet, farming, pollution, and other large scale environmental effects of humans can be made out.
![]() |
Europe at night |
Concentrations of energy use show how the beings on the planet gather in centers and along coast lines.
A visitor could figure out that these beings use water and land both.
Some kind of organizational structure must exist for the creatures inhabiting this place in order for such massive use of energy.
Before we even reach a hundred kilometers in the sky, our nation states disappear from view.
![]() |
Our planet by day and night |
Our Planet
When we move up far enough to take in the whole planet, it is still possible to see that our human species exists. The lights of civilization burn bright in some spectra at night.
Individuals, communities, cities, and nations all fuse together. Any sense of identity beyond 'humanity' has no real meaning from this distance.
The weather patterns of the globe are much more dominate visually. Vast expanses of mountain, desert and ocean divide the planet's surface.
The first images of the entire planet came to us in startling rush. As the Apollo astronauts rocketed towards the moon, a large chunk of the humanity watched these initial views of our shared globe on their televisions together.
![]() |
Earth and moon in a single image |
As space craft move away from earth and moon to distant planets in the solar system, we saw images giving us a context of our largest familiar identity.
Land masses, oceans and feint weather patterns are all that can be seen.
The lights of our cities fade from view at this distance. It is no longer possible to tell if intelligent life exists on the little balls floating in space.
Individuals and nations seem to have no meaning from this height. The most important things in our daily lives do not register even faintly.
![]() |
Earth seen from Saturn |
As the Cassini spacecraft orbits Saturn, we see the earth and moon as a single, remote dot.
The very existence of the planet comes to our awareness only if we observe keenly.
If we were to listen to the radio waves, only faint traces of human activity can be heard.
At this height, all that we ever were and all that we are barely registers in the universe.
Our most remote spacecraft is Voyager 1, launched in the late 1970's. It sent this image of earth from the very edge of the solar system.
From six billion kilometers away, the earth is not even visible anymore. Two magnifications are embedded into the photograph. One is of the region of Venus. The other is of the region of earth. Neither planet is visible even when zoomed into to the highest amount possible.
Our light giving and life sustaining star, the sun, appears tiny, its features indistinguishable.
Unique, Special and Valuable
As far as we know, there is no other intelligent life in the universe. Even if there are beings who are like us, such beings are very, very rare.
"Up there in the immensity of the Cosmos, an inescapable perception awaits us. National boundaries are not evident when we view the Earth from space. Fanatical ethnic, religious or national chauvinisms are a little difficult to maintain when we see our planet as a fragile blue crescent fading to become an inconspicuous point of light against the bastion and citadel of the stars." --Carl SaganThe struggles in our lives seem so puny and insignificant in the context of just our own solar system. Our focus on toys, teams, treats, tests, and those other things we occupy our minds with are truly trivial.
I often close my eyes and try to imagine this greater context. Stepping up and away from that which is immediately visible allows a sense of humility to fill me. The awesome uniqueness of my existence makes it more precious than I am able to imagine. My frustrations and even my joys dissipate at the wonder of it all.
Monday, March 25, 2013
I Got My Freedom, Bugger Off!
We claim to believe in ideals that transcend nations. Freedom, equality, liberty, kindness, and
cleanliness are values we hold dear.
There are many details that divide us. The proper role of government, the degree to
which freedom should be allowed, and the amount of kindness our relationships
require are all values up for debate.
The core values remain.
We speak of them with pride. We
claim to be willing to defend them with our actions and even our lives.
Ideals Un-extended
Yet, we exclude those who are not in our nation states from
these very values. We do not act as if
we believe that all humans, in all places deserve these ideals.
![]() |
Where are our values here? |
When a crazed shooter kills our children in a school we
react with shock and horror. When our
drones kill as many children in a foreign land we look the other way.
We hold elections and expect them to be fair and open. When those in other lands elections are
corrupted and the will of the people there subverted we look the other way.
Before the United States
was attacked at Pearl Harbor , millions died
around the world in a struggle against tyranny.
Most of us thought we should not get involved in their conflict and
passed Neutrality
Acts believing that isolationism was good for us. Largely Republican, conservatives claimed we
should take care of our own and let the others die or live of their own
doing. As late as March of 1941, we made
illegal the selling of arms to the British.
![]() |
What obligation do we have here? |
Over a
billion human beings live in poverty and destitution around the world. Lacking food, water, sanitation, clothing,
shelter and education, they have no chance at obtaining the freedoms we find so
precious. The modern industrial
democracies do little to aid them unless ‘national interests’ are threatened.
The evidence is clear, we at best pay lip-service for
extending our ideals beyond our own national borders. Not just the United States ,
but virtually all modern nation states.
The world of the haves looks away from the have-nots.
That others do not have freedom, equality,
liberty, kindness and cleanliness is not our problem. Our deeds tell the world "I got my freedom. Bugger off."
Spare No Cost
In our ‘War on Terror’ we have invaded other countries, sent
out assassination squads, tortured human beings and engaged in other inhumane
acts in order to defend our freedoms. As
George
W. Bush said in his 2002 State of the Union address, “We are a country awakened to danger and called to defend freedom.”
He continued “They hate our freedoms: our
freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble and
disagree with each other.”
We have succeeded in defeating al Qaeda. No repeat attacks have occurred on our
soil. The mafia like organization that
attacked us essentially exists no more.
Our
tactics and methods have taken over 10 years
and cost over a $1,400,000,000,000 ($1.4
trillion) dollars to achieve this end.
We have spared no cost in finding and stopping the people who brutally
killed a few thousand citizens.
Of course we should have found and brought those who did
such heinous acts to justice. That is
clearly a necessary course of action.
Safety and justice require we find and hold accountable those who commit
acts of great evil. Often evil acts are
required in order to overcome other, greater evils.
In the same time frame, we have spent less than $150,000,000,000
($150 billion) on all our foreign aid, military and economic, to all other
needs in the world. If you subtract the
economic aid to Afghanistan
and Iraq
where the damage of war and nation building are occurring based on our War on
Terror, only $112,000,000,000 ($112 billion) was spent.
Isolationism
Suggesting that we only
invest in our own security flies in the face of our stated ideals. We become more secure as other nations
prosper. Spreading our ideals is the
best defense against aggression.
![]() |
Seeking what we have |
If Latin America had more
freedom, less corruption, more liberty, and the other things we cherish, we
would not have an immigration problem.
Only because there is such a huge imbalance in the values we hold so
precious is the United
States worth moving to illegally.
The United
States is not the only country that has an
immigration problem. Europe
and other developed nations also experience this migration rush from lands
where freedoms are not allowed to lands where they are precious.
Many are advocating
that we cannot afford to help others now.
Claiming we are borrowing on our future, they wish to cut what little
aid we do provide. This is a short sighted
view of our own best interest.
By not engaging in spreading our values to the world we risk
our future more. The consequences of not
making investments that spread our values are dire. Without our assistance less free cultures will
allow things we do not want to thrive and grow.
Hate, lack of opportunity, dependence, and restrictions flourish in
places where we do not engage.
The cost of doing nothing is always higher than the cost of spreading our values.
Putting our Money
Where Our Mouth Is
If we truly believe in our freedoms and ideals, we should be helping the rest of humanity to achieve them.
There are many non-violent means of spreading our values. Teaching people to read, job skills, and hygiene seem great places to start. Helping to build infrastructure like roads, wells, and power stations seems positive also.
As we debate where to cut spending in this time of economic contraction, spreading our values is one place we cannot cut.
The developed nations of the planet have a moral obligation to do more. It is not sufficient to think we are safe because we have these values.
The developed nations of the planet have a moral obligation to do more. It is not sufficient to think we are safe because we have these values.
To turn away is hypocritical. To suggest that only the wealthy deserve
freedom, equality, liberty, kindness, and cleanliness is to live a lie.
It is in our own best interest to help lift all humans into
those things we claim to hold dear.
Note: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights might be a good place to start. It was adopted by the United Nations in 1948 as a result of the world's experiences from the Second World War.
Note: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights might be a good place to start. It was adopted by the United Nations in 1948 as a result of the world's experiences from the Second World War.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Light & Learning Limit Liberty
Do you believe in liberty and free will? Perhaps you think everything is pre-determined to a plan? Maybe you think there is a mixture of the two? No matter your views, we have limits to our actions, chosen or fated. If we CAN choose, then liberty demands we choose well.

Our now is constantly moving toward the Future and away from the Past. This kind of describes our everyday of experience of time.

We can collapse space into a map of east/west and north/south and put it on the time line as our shared experience of Space Now.
With this imagined view, space looks like a map moving through time.
Some argue that the future and past are is fixed and we move from the past into the future with no choices.
A determined existence suggests that time and free will are but illusions experienced as we move down the line of time.
Liberty
Many accept that there is free will; that we have some ability to make choices. We can say we have the liberty of our choices.
Free will means that of all the possible pasts, our choices collapsed into the now that we have.
A cone is used to represent our collective choices that bring us to this moment.
Each choice made by each individual limits the possible now we can experience.

Our experience past is gone. The choices that collapsed into the now are no longer available to us.
Free will also implies we have a range of possible futures.
Each choice we make in the now limits the possibilities of the future.
This would make the free will time line and its possibilities look more like two cones, one of past and one of future, connected to the now.
Our past collapses into the now limiting the potential of our futures.
Light Limits Liberty
Nothing has ever been detected that moves faster than the speed of light.
The best we know the speed of light places hard and fast limits on what we can do.
Light speed places a plausible limit onto the future we can choose.
There are still choices we can make that take us to the limits of the possible, but they may not lead to the future we prefer.
When we fail to make choices about our actions in the now, we limit ourselves as if there is no choice at all. Without choices being made in the now, the future is limited to the probable.
Setting goals, imagining possible futures, and acting in the now, we can move from the probable to the preferable.
This is harder to do and often takes repeated changes as there is a tendency to return to the probable rather than the preferable.
Knowledge Limits Liberty
Our knowledge also places a plausible limit on what we can become. The more we as a species know, the great the range of opportunities we have for our future.

Each choice we make limits what is learn-able by us as individuals and as a group.
There are something’s we will never know. Our brains are small and the universe so large.
Choose Learning
The choices made by our ancestors have brought us to where we are now.
If we believe in liberty, then there is an awesome responsibility on our shoulders.
The more we learn, the greater our potential futures can be.
When we fail to learn, we limit our children’s possibilities. We even limit all future generation’s possibilities.
There are some potential futures we can already never realize.
Within our ability we should stretch for the edges of the possible to find a preferable future for our species.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Is the US Becoming Despotic?
"Avoid the comfortable idea that the mere form of government can of itself safeguard a nation against despotism." ~ Harold Laswell, PHD of Yale University in 1946
Democracy and Despotism
At the end of World War II, Encyclopedia Britannica's film division produced a film exploring how societies and nations rank on the spectrum from democracy to despotism.
Having fought such a violent struggle against fascism, there was much thought given to what had happened and how it might be avoided in future.
Reflecting upon their experience, the warning signs of despotism were noted:
- Concentration of power into a few hands
- Fewer people considered worthy of respect
These cautions operate in our current era. They also suggest we should keep power divided and respect other's right to hold different viewpoints.
Concentration of Government Power
We have divided government today. The supreme court and congress are not concentrations of power at this time.
![]() |
Divided power |
The supreme court is often divided in its decisions with none getting their way all the time. Most decisions are split and few unanimous. Debate and dissension seems standard operating procedure.
Congress is divided between the left and right; the Senate is Democrat controlled and the House Republican. Divisions within parties even constantly struggle to gain tactical advantage. A push and pull between competing ideas is a daily battle which unfolds before us.
Many individual states trend toward one ideology or another. Many other states have divided ideologies. There is no clear concentration of political power across the states, although a few states may not be divided.
![]() |
Distribution of U.S. wealth |
There appear to be business, individuals or other interests that have concentrated power.
Economic power has become very concentrated. Fewer and fewer people control the wealth of the land. This slanting of the distribution of wealth allows hidden political power to accumulate. While voting may continue, the laws are drafted by those with money to influence more often than the those who represent the electorate.
Over the past 50 years, economic power has become concentrated into fewer and fewer hands.
A strong middle class would be a good counter balance to coalescing economic interests. Taxes, law and purchasing power can be used to counter balance those whose economic interests attempt to control the people.
The idea that only a few of us should have earned the wealth of the land is warning sign that despots could be near. I do think there is some secret plot, rather fear a trend that puts our democracy at risk.
I am also not advocating socialism as a solution. An equal playing field for all citizens to compete fairly will allow wealth and incomes to remain unconcentrated. Capitalism must be regulated, greed should not be the means for political power.
Worthy of Respect
In the arena of respect however, our society may be at a higher risk of becoming despotic. People of strong views are often not listening to one another. We tend to group together in insulated bubbles of ideology.
![]() |
Respectful? |
Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh would be examples of voices that frequently show disdain for their opponents on the right. How they speak to others illustrates incivility. Using disdain, interruption, and ridicule as tactics; their lack of esteem for others as human beings is easily heard.
On the left we have examples in Steven Colbert and Huffington Post. Frequent coarseness, flippancy, and impiety are used to present their political opponents as being less than human. Often cloaked in humor, the negative impacts can be devastating to persons rather than ideas.
Of course all humans are within their rights to be biased. It is not the bias that leads to despotism. It is the lack of respect for others that can do so.
![]() |
Casting political stones |
While it may be fun to use Ad Hominem (to the person) attacks, they are dangerous when they become the standard means of communicating with each other.
Ridicule, dismissal, disdain, interruption, rudeness, and impoliteness are not tactics that mature, reasoned adults should use in discourse. Verbal abuse is a form of mental violence. Allowing constant and frequent verbal abuse leads to devaluing human beings.
Despots thrive in an environment of hate.
What Not To Do
One should not question the moral character of a person who disagrees with us. Actions and opinions can be found immoral by one or many of us. Holding an idea by itself is not immoral. It is our duty to help others become moral, not dismiss or persecute them as unworthy of morality.
When a person's circumstances are used to define their views by others, it is a sign of lack of respect. Saying "They only passed that law to gain votes" or "only the uneducated listen to that idea" are disrespectful means of attacking a person rather than an idea.
Guilt by association is another frequent way of disrespecting other people. This fallacy says "This person thinks a thing and another person we all know is evil thinks the same thing, therefore they both must be evil." These arguments devalue the person rather than the idea.
Disagreement is Normal
No one has perfect morality, circumstance or association. We all fail at somethings. People who claim perfection are acting dishonestly.
![]() |
Every man is a sinner |
Divided political power is a strength of democracy. Dictators can not control divided power. Kings do not prosper when people contend for different views. It may not be a pretty form of government, it is the best we have found so far.
Divided economic power is also a strength that keeps away despotism. A strong, vibrant middle class is necessary in order to not allow one or a few to control the land and its laws.
Ridiculing people rather than ideas demeans us all. Disagree, debate, and vote.
Do not demean people for their ideas, good or bad.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
War on Death
Declaring a ‘War on Death’
may be more productive than declaring a war on taxes. It may even be technologically possible. Why then don’t we declare a war on death?
In a letter to
Jean-Baptiste Leroy in 1789, Benjamin Franklin wrote:
“Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance that promises permanency; but in the world nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes.”
![]() |
Death and taxes |
He wrote this letter in
French to his friend within a few weeks after the founding structural document had
been adopted.
In recent times, many have
spoken out that we need to reduce taxes.
Some, like Grover
Norquist, have even declared an informal ‘war on taxes’. The basic idea is to reduce the percentage of
taxes paid by citizens.
What if, instead of taxes,
we declared a “war on death”?
The battlefield of such a
war would be to push the length of productive life for humans to as long as we
can make it. Not just healthy habits to live
longer, but technologies to extend life-spans dramatically.
Why We Struggle
Assume for a moment that
it is technologically feasible to double the length of a person’s life. What would be the result?
Longer lives give each
person more time. More time to learn,
more time to work and more time to play.
![]() |
Longer childhoods |
With longer time to learn
we could become smarter and wiser before we begin to impact society. Extending childhood by ten years or more
would give parents more time to build character and values into their
children. Education could be extended to
cover more information allowing a better educated electorate.
With longer time to work,
each life would be more productive. As
time goes by, people become better at their vocations, so skills would have
more time to be practiced and used. A
longer working life would also allow more time to save for retirement and old
age, reducing individual’s burdens upon society.
With longer time to play,
the quality of our lives could be increased.
Investing effort into our families, communities and culture could
improve the quality of our lives.
Progress So Far
As fantastic as the idea
may seem, we have already more than doubled the average life-span in developed
countries.
In medieval Britain , the
average length of life was about 30 years.
By the 1600’s the average age of death had been pushed up to 35
years. By the 1900, the average jumped
to over 50 years. Now it is typical to
live until our mid-70s.
Much of the historical
improvement in length of life has been due to nutrition, hygiene, and reduced
infant mortality. Science and cultural
practice worked together to allow doubling of years lived.
Assuming one made it
through childhood, had healthy habits, and disease or dangerous conditions did
not kill a person early, the maximum length of life has stayed fairly
stable.
Our progress so far has
been about eliminating the causes of death rather than extending the length of
life.
![]() |
Cells degrade |
Technology and Habit
To achieve long life-spans,
we need to make progress on the causes of aging. We would have to increase the longevity of
each individual to make new gains in life-span.
If we view our bodies as a
process, we can work on extending the functioning of the components that make
the process work.
Aging and eventual death
are caused by accumulative changes to the complex molecules and cells that we
are made of. Several factors contribute
to aging and death.
Most cells only divide about 50 times before
toxins, irradiation, and errors break down DNA so it is no longer viable.
Some plants and animals
have genetic
repair capabilities that could be researched in order to build technologies
in order to overcome DNA breakdown.
Learning how the regenerative capacity of these creatures work would be
one place to start looking.
There are other
technologies that could be developed to extend life-spans.
![]() |
Current sources of pluripotent stem cells |
Pluripotent stem cells can
be induced
to become other types of cells. Although
previously controversial because of embryonic stem cells, it is now possible to
induce adult skin cells to become other cells. We may soon be able to use our own cells as building blocks.
Researchers have recently discovered
technology that allows a mouse skin cell to become a brain cell. Extending these tools could allow us to grow
our own, custom built replacement parts.
Each individual would have
to improve their own habits in order to minimize cell and DNA damage. Bad practices already can lead to shortened
lives.
We could choose as a
society to institute cultural institutions that would promote better
behavior. Parents, teachers, churches
and other influencers could help instill the virtues of healthy habits.
Dangers Overcome
With current birth rates,
more people would place more demand on resources. We may have to adjust our rates of
consumption or improve our technologies in order to not deplete some limited
resources.
With more time and
education, we may be able to overcome these kinds of challenges. With more at stake in a longer future,
individuals could be motivated to be more prudent in their choices and habits.
If a revolutionary
technology were to appear that suddenly and drastically increased life-spans,
there would be social upheaval to deal with.
Those unable to afford the
technology could become quite jealous.
Those who control the technology could become quite powerful.
I will not pretend that
the consequences of life extending technologies will not present difficult
challenges. However to turn away from
the technology because of the challenges seems a foolish reason not to try. As a parent, I find it a moral imperative to
give my children the opportunity for long, healthy productive lives.
Cost Benefit
Each year the U.S. economy
is about $15,800,000,000,000 (almost $16 trillion). This only represents about a quarter of the
world’s economic output in a given year.
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Even if it costs $16
trillion to develop and roll out a technology that would double life-spans, the
payoff in productivity would greatly outweigh the costs.
On average each person
works over 30 years of their life now,
doubling working time to 60 years of productivity is one payoff.
The labor return on
capital investment for such a technology could be as high as 3000% on the one
year investment.
Even taking the ultra-conservative
approach that the benefit would cover the costs is still a wise move. Who would not want to live twice as long if
the costs to do so were covered?
The extra years of labor a
person could have are added on to the end of their current careers meaning
their expertise would be greater. The
payoff to society for each person who gains a doubling of lifespan would be
more than a quantity of dollars, but also be a qualitative improvement in
labor.
With life expectancy in
the mid-70’s a person is employed over
90,000 hours in their lives. Even
improving this number by half would be an enormous gain in professional output.
Who Should Fund it?
Like with the Atom Bomb,
life extending technology would have to be controlled by society to ensure
power was not concentrated in the hands of the few.
If at some future time a
private institution were to fund and discover technologies that dramatically
expand life, they would be in a position of vast power. With current patent law, this could upset
cultural and societal structures beyond repair.
Currently, no institution
but government has the capability to focus and fund such large scale research.
Allowing government
funding could make the research publicly available and keep the power of such
technologies focused on the whole of society rather than just a few people.
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Baby's future in the balance |
The nation that achieves
this technology first will be at great advantage to those nations that do not
have it. The first mover advantage of
longer life-spans could be enormous. For this reason, peaceful nations may even
want to share the burden of costs and the benefits of discovery.
The research would not
have to be funded all at once. Given the
potential outcome, even some public debt would be warranted as payoffs could
easily overcome its risks and costs.
Even if the effort were to
fail, the knowledge that it is not possible to future generations would be a
boon. Knowing that a war on death is not
winnable is information that can effect how future generations would live our
lives.
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How long can we delay? |
Dream On
It is easy to dismiss such
ideas “out of hand”.
Some will think their
religious doctrines threatened. Others
will doubt it is even possible.
It seems reasonable that
Aristotle, Isaac Newton, or even Madam Curie would have seen the idea of
putting a man on the moon as fanciful science fiction.
Consider for a moment the
alternative. If we could make life
longer and do not, are we not acting immorally to future generations?
Perhaps extending life-spans is fanciful.
We must however ask
ourselves; what if it is not? What if it
could be?
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