-----Original Message-----
From: Anders Sandberg <asa@nada.kth.se>
To: extropians@extropy.com <extropians@extropy.com>
Date: 09 December 1998 15:40
Subject: Re: Life expectancy increasing rapidly
>"Samael" <Samael@dial.pipex.com> writes:
>
>> I think that most current medical technologies are merely increasing our
>> lifespansd towards our natural limits. I look forward to the future
>> treatment that increases those limits dramatically (or removes them
>> entirely).
>
>Yes, this is true. The maximum lifespan (around 110-120 years) seems
>to have been unchanged so far. That is why I'm so interested in recent
>advances in tweaking drosophilia and C. elegans genes to increase the
>lifespan, not to mention the further discoveries about how telomerase
>is regulated. These results seem to have real potential for increasing
>the maximum lifespan.
Oh, and I suspect that the 'maximum lifespan' for people is actually variable between 70 and 120, most settling around the 90 mark. People seem to just fall apart at around that age, with general detirioratin rather than specific parts wearing out. This is what is so hard to fix. Hopefully they'll take less than 60 years to fix that one. (I'm 26 by the way).
Samael