From the
Daily Sundial, a high level profile of biomedical gerontologist
Aubrey de Grey, the
Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence (SENS), and the past couple of years of public discussion on the topic: "Speaking at conferences in Europe, the U.S. and China, and interviewing with major media outlets such as
'60 Minutes,' the New York Times, and
Popular Science, De Grey has sent ripples, and sometimes waves, through the technology and scientific community by claiming that he has developed
an age-reversal model that may feasibly work in as little as
a decade in mice and 20 to 30 years in humans." Conditional on
large-scale funding and growing research community, which people often miss out. "I'm convinced that de Grey's strategy for achieving life extension is the best that has been proposed. We have
a comprehensive list of the types of age-associated damage that kill people in a normal life span, and a corresponding list of therapies for treating each type, which are widely supported by experts in the relevant fields ... Scientists find things out for the sake of finding things out. Engineers find things out in order to solve some problem so they are always
looking for ways to minimize how much they need to know to implement a solution or ways to sidestep their own ignorance. This is antithetical to the scientist's raison d'etre, so scientists constantly overlook it."
View the Article Under Discussion:
http://media.sundial.csun.edu/media/storage/paper862/news/2007/05/07/News/Fantasy.Or.Fountain.Of.Youth-2896479.shtml
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