On Thursday April 20, 2006, at the University of Toronto's Bahen Centre for Information Technology,
Dr. Mark Walker
delivered a presentation about the ethics of radical life extension, or
as Walker refers to it, 'superlongevity.' The talk was organized by the
Toronto Transhumanist Association.
The talk was party adapted from his recent paper, "
Universal Superlongevity: Is it Inevitable and is it Good?"
Mark
Walker Ph.D. is a research associate in philosophy at Trinity College,
University of Toronto. He is founder and president of
Permanent End International,
a nonprofit organization devoted to ending hunger, illiteracy and
environmental degradation. He serves on the editorial board of the
Journal of Evolution and Technology and served on the Board of Directors of the
World Transhumanist Association from 2002 to 2006.
Attendance
for the event was good with about 20 people present. Walker spoke for
about an hour discussing ethical issues surrounding life extension. He
focused on two major objections or concerns to superlongevity, namely
the potential boredom problem of radically extended lives and the issue
of overpopulation. Walker presented a fair and balanced case in favour
of life extension, noting that while overpopulation may be an issue in
the future, it's not an untenable one. He offered a number of
solutions, including the idea of individuals voluntarily choosing not
to procreate, or as Walker dubbed it, a 'non-proliferation pact' for
human reproduction.
After his presentation, Walker entertained
questions for about 30 minutes, which was in turn followed by more
informal person-to-person discussions.
I recorded the entire presentation and will be publishing it as an audiocast in a couple of weeks.
Thanks go out to Dr. Mark walker and all those who helped me organize this event.+
Cross-posted from Sentient Developments.