Courtesy of Pixabay.com |
Everyone knows that there
only two things in life of which we can all be assured: Death and Taxes. Now, one of the billionaires behind the
world’s most popular search engine wants to take a crack at eliminating the first
of these woes. That’s right; Larry Page
of Google has made it his stated goal to cure death. With a war chest in the billions, I guess if
anyone can take a legitimate crack at the Grim Reaper, he can.
The Search for Immortality Dates Way Back
Not that the search for an
alternative to death is new, before he died in 210 BC, the first sovereign emperor
of China, Zhao Zheng spent much of his time and considerable wealth searching
for the elixir of life. So did the
legendary Spanish explorer, Ponce de Leon, who scoured Florida in 1513 for the
mythical Fountain of Youth. While both these and other historical notables had
an almost obsessive desire to cheat death, none of them had access to
modern medicine, DNA research, or medical
miracles such as transplantation, bionics or bioprinting that are reshaping the
very notion of what it is to be human.
Page, on the other hand, does have these and other technologies at his
disposal. In addition, he is incorporating
them into a new medical technology company called Calico.
Enter Calico
Short for “California Life
Company,” Calico sounds more like a shelter for cats than a research
company. However, when you think about it,
cats are supposed to have nine lives.
Google Ventures (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Maybe
Page’s latest venture does, too. Considered
the brainchild of Bill Marris, Google Ventures managing partner, he became the
catalyst for Calico when he noted that hundreds of companies were focused on
curing a variety of medical conditions and diseases. Yet there were no companies that focused on
the root cause of disease or what caused the body to progressively fail over
time. That we understood the mechanisms
involved in death, largely due to progressive genetic degradation, as the body
aged was not an issue. What was at issue
was whether it was possible to not only identify the specific causes of aging, but
also to develop treatments that would effectively slow, stop or even reverse
them.
It was with this stated
goal in mind that Arthur Levinson, chairman and ex-CEO of the biotechnology
company, Genentech, was tapped to head Calico.
Currently chair of Apple Computer’s board of directors, Apple CEO Tim
Cook gave Levinson and Calico his blessing by recently stating, “"For too many of our friends and family, life has been cut
short or the quality of their life is too often lacking. Art is one of the
crazy ones who think it doesn’t have to be this way. There is no one better
suited to lead this mission and I am excited to see the results."
Curing Cancer is Not as Big of an Advance as you Might Think
That other people share
the belief that trying to “cure death” is a topic best relegated to the lunatic
fringe
along with such things as Bigfoot research is obvious. It did not help matters that Larry Page was
quoted in a Time Magazine interview as saying, “We think of solving cancer
as this huge thing that’ll totally change the world. But when you really take a
step back and look at it, yeah, there are many, many tragic cases of cancer,
and it’s very, very sad, but in the aggregate, it’s not as big an advance as you
might think.”
Larry Page (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
This caused
other journalists to respond in kind, such as Digital Trends Andrew Couts, who wrote,
“Okay, so Page doesn’t think curing
cancer would be that big
of a deal – a notion that I’m certain offended a great many people, researchers
and victims alike. For me, however, the fact that the tech world’s elite wants
to cure death – and think that they can do it – comes as little surprise: Of
course they want to live forever – they’re super successful rich people!”
http://www.digitaltrends.com/opinion/google-calico-disrupting-death/#ixzz2lfRgWovD
http://www.digitaltrends.com/opinion/google-calico-disrupting-death/#ixzz2lfRgWovD
Nevertheless, all sarcasm
aside, some of the serious questions posed by Calico that need to be addressed
are:
1. Is it possible to reprogram or reset the body’s biological clock?
2. If not, can the next generation of medical technology significantly
extend life?
3. Does bionics represent the ultimate solution?
4.
If it is ultimately possible to
truly cheat death, what are the consequences?
Can We Live Forever? That is the Real
Question
To start with, we
have to look at the strides in longevity that have been made by humanity over
the centuries. People born in the year
1800 had an average life expectancy of 35, while those born today have a life
expectancy of 75-80 years. So what has
to keep happening to keep this trend from continuing? Will we live to be 150-160
years of age by the year 2200? The reason we live longer than our ancestors has
mostly to do with the fact that we have learned how to combat disease, treat
life threatening conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and cancer, and that
we better understand the nutritional requirements of the human body.
The problem is that
even if we were to cure all disease
and through a combination of radical surgical procedures including
transplantation and artificial organs, be able to effectively treat all known
The Human Life Span, Twenty-Five Years Ago vs. Today (1939) (Photo credit: yorkd) |
physical maladies, this would not be sufficient to keep us alive
indefinitely. Like it or not, in every one
of us is a ticking time bomb that ensures cell death.
When you get right
down to the basis of life, be that of a human or simple bacterium, all revolve
around mitosis, the simple act of cell division. Research has shown that healthy cells are
programmed to reproduce for a limited amount of time before they die. In fact, if you take cells from something old
and transplant them into something young, the older cells will still die at
their preordained time. This is why as
people age their bones become brittle, their skin wrinkles, and the hair thins
and the body becomes less able to ward off disease. We are all in a sense programmed to
self-destruct.
The phenomenon known
as the Hayflick Limit has been known since 1961 when Dr. Leonard Hayflick, Professor
of Medical Biology at Stanford University, first discovered that human cells
divide a limited number of times in vitro. Author of the book “How and Why We
Age,” first published in 1994, Hayflick demonstrated that during continued
mitosis the end of the chromosome called the Telomere progressively
degrades. This means that through
repeated division, the enzymes that duplicate DNA produce copy errors that
ultimately affect cell replication. He
also showed that when this mechanism broke down it resulted in either cell
death or malignancy. That’s right sports
fans, cancer cells while deadly can live forever.
So-Called Methuselah Mice Live Twice as Long as Their Brethren
Laboratory mice Location: Children's Hospital Los Angeles Research Institute, Los Angeles, CA Equipment: Canon PowerShot S110 (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Of course, that
didn’t stop other researchers from looking for a way of slowing the process
down. While many have espoused the
ingestion of compounds known to halt the production of cell damaging free
radicals, others think that telomerase; an enzyme that mends the protective
covering on cells could be the answer.
The problem is that to date no studies have yet proven that either of
these concepts has been able to significantly increase the lifespan of mammals.
However, a series of
experiments with mice began in 1986 by Roy Walford and Richard Weindruch
reported that by restricting their diet by 30 percent that mice could live up
to twice as long as those fed a normal diet.
Before you start pulling in your belt and breaking out your Adkins Diet
Plan, let me also point out that the same experiment was performed with rhesus
monkeys begun in 1987 by the National Institute on Aging, which while reporting
health benefits did not demonstrate increased lifespan.
An Then There’s Robo-Sapien
English: Crop and moustache from Androide pic (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
What immortality in
essence boils down to is correcting the built-in genetic copy error while
preventing immortal cells from replicating uncontrollably into cancer. When you consider that until recently such
things as gene splicing and gene therapy were the stuff of science fiction then
it is entirely possible that eventually it will be possible to program our
genes to turn off the self-destruct mechanism.
If that does not work, there are other paths to immortality. Take entrepreneur
and author Ray Kurzweil for instance.
Described as “the restless genius” by The Wall
Street Journal, and “the ultimate thinking machine” by Forbes. Inc. magazine
which ranked him #8 among entrepreneurs in the United States, calling him the
“rightful heir to Thomas Edison.” Ray
was the principal inventor of the first CCD flatbed scanner, the first
omni-font optical character recognition, the first print-to-speech reading
machine for the blind, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, the first music
synthesizer capable of recreating the grand piano and other orchestral
instruments, and the first commercially marketed large-vocabulary speech
recognition. Ray is the recipient of the
$500,000 MIT-Lemelson Prize, the world’s largest for innovation. In 1999, he
received the National Medal of Technology, the nation’s highest honor in
technology, from President Clinton in a White House ceremony. And in 2002, he
was inducted into the National Inventor’s Hall of Fame, established by the U.S.
Patent Office.
Among
other claims, Ray has also postulated that by 2045, an event known, as
"the singularity" will occur, and allowing humans to fully integrate
their psyches with machines. Were that to happen, all any of us who could
afford it would have to do to cheat death would be to upload what we call our
personality into that of a robot and voila, instant immortality.
Russian Billionaire is Taking the Plunge
So
enamored with this concept was he that Russian billionaire Dmitry Itskov has
already begun construction of a robotic replica of himself so that once the
technology of mind transfer has been worked out, he can be the first billionaire
on the block to merge with a machine.
Since he is currently 32 years old, this will make him only 55 years old
in 2045, which gives him a certain amount of wiggle room should the technology
take a bit longer to become a reality.
What if These Guys are Right?
Just like the Wright
Brothers, being the first to fly with wings, or Neil Armstrong standing on the
surface of the Moon, if humanity puts its mind to a problem then there is a
high probability that we can solve most any problem. The real problem as I see it is not a matter
of technology. The problem is more about
practicality. In other words, what
happens if we get it right?
What are the Ramifications?
Think about the
ramifications of immortality. Currently
there are more than seven billion people living on Earth. Even taking into consideration such things as
accidental death and homicide, if we all woke up tomorrow morning with the
realization that we would never die, how long would it be
Population of the world and its regions (in millions). Data from http://esa.un.org/unpp/ . Solid line: medium variant. Shaded region: low to high variant. Dashed line: constant-fertility variant. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
before we all starved
to death? Considering that it currently takes
our global population of mere mortals less than 40 years on average to double, it
would not take long for humans to run out of resources. This growth rate would ensure the fact that
within a generation or two we would all face starvation. I do not know of any technology that would
enable us to keep 20 billion people fed and we have not yet invented star-ships
capable of interstellar travel.
Of course, like most
other technologies, it will in all likelihood take a number of years for the
benefits of immortality to reach the masses.
In which case, this means that only the wealthy will be able to afford
such a luxury. This could also prove
problematic since this would enable the super-rich to consolidate their power,
which is usually the way in which most revolutions have been fomented since
human civilization began.
Would Immortality be a Gift or a Curse?
Even for those in
possession of immortality, it could prove more of a curse than a gift. A number of fictional works have been penned
over the years about the perils associated with eternal life. In the Picture of Dorian Gray, the main
character barters his soul for eternal youth only to pay the price in depravity
and despair down the road as everyone around him ages and dies.
As usual with human knowledge,
wisdom in many cases takes a back seat. If the Wright Brothers had foreseen
what would become of their invention, where forty short years’ later entire
cities were being carpet-bombed and millions of civilians killed, would they
have stuck to building bicycles? Who
knows, but for what it’s worth, if it came down to a choice between curing
death or eliminating taxes, I for one would rather see all of us a little
richer rather than a whole lot older.
In this article, I
discussed Calico’s grandiose goals and current efforts to thwart death, disease
and aging. I further discussed efforts by science to cheat death and disease
by medical, medicinal and or robotic means. This article goes on to cover prior efforts
by humanity to achieve immortality and it then brings the reader up to speed on why
science is getting close to making head way towards achieving this
goal. Last, it discusses the ramifications of reaching these goals. If you found
this article to be useful, share it with your friends and co-workers. If you
have a comment, provide it in the space below. It has been my pleasure making this
journey with you.
If you like this article, you can find more by typing “Google” in the search box at the top left of this blog. If you found this article useful, share it with your friends, families and co-works. If you have a comment related to this article, leave it in the comment sections below. If you would like a free copy of our book, "Internet Marketing Tips for the 21st Century", fill out the form below.
Thanks for sharing your time with me.
If you like this article, you can find more by typing “Google” in the search box at the top left of this blog. If you found this article useful, share it with your friends, families and co-works. If you have a comment related to this article, leave it in the comment sections below. If you would like a free copy of our book, "Internet Marketing Tips for the 21st Century", fill out the form below.
Thanks for sharing your time with me.
Since 1995, Carl Weiss has been helping clients succeed
online. He owns and operates several online marketing businesses,
including Working the Web to
Win and Jacksonville
Video Production. He also co-hosts the weekly radio show, "Working the Web to Win,"
every Tuesday at 4 p.m. Eastern on BlogTalkRadio.com.
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