Remember ME - You Me and Dementia

October 18, 2009

WORLD: Longevity Debate - Can We Now Live Forever?

. DUBAI, United Arab Emirates / Khaleej Times / Opinion / October 18, 2009 By Jonathan Power Perhaps after all, the healthy ones among us in the Western world and the middle class in the Third World have a chance of living forever. Already, 
according to the World Health Organisation, a child born today has a 
50 per cent chance of living until 100. But by the time they reach 100, medical science will have continued its immense strides forward and they could easily make 200. In fact, for those who will make 95 without Alzheimer’s the same goes true. Look at the graph of medical discoveries, life saving drugs and surgery, the graph is geometric. Over the next 100 years it will become vertical. What can stop it? AIDS or an epidemic of universal flue or some malign reaction to a drug like Thalidomide? Look at this graph and they are just minor blips. So why haven’t the great professors of medicine taken such findings to the Lancet or the New England Journal of Medicine? Because it wouldn’t be published. These esteemed magazines won’t publish unless the experiments can be proved to be true. There are no experiments. What about the earth’s carrying power? Forgotten your Malthus. Over the last 50 years, the doomsayers have said that the world is running out of food. In George Bernard Shaw’s “Man and Superman” — the returned Irish-American, Malone, insists on calling the great famine “the starvation”. “Me father died of the starvation 
in the black ’47. Maybe you’ve heard 
of it?” “The famine?” “No, the starvation. When a country is full of food and exporting it, there can be no famine. Me father was starved dead and I was starved out to America in me mother’s arms.” But where will all the people live? Ninety-eight per cent of the world’s surface is uninhabited and often uninhabitable- the poles, the tundra, the tropical forests, the deserts, much of the insect-infested savannah and, not least, the seas. But we have time on 
our side. Over the 250 years since the Agricultural Revolution science and human ingenuity have enabled us to bring vast amounts of once undeveloped land into cultivation. The process is now accelerating faster than ever before. The seas with its fish and protean-rich plankton should pose no problem. Neither 
will grow vast amounts of food in our gardens. Remember at this stage we are only discussing the so-called rich world and the middle class in such countries as India, China and Brazil, a small percentage of the world population. But even today the three most overcrowded countries in the world — Barbados, Belgium and Holland — have vast areas of free land. Beyond that, as high-powered medicine moves to poorer people, including many of those in the rich countries, larger numbers will join the longevity crowd. But this will happen infinitely slowly. Besides they too will benefit from the above. Let’s be optimistic and say this will take 150 years. By then we will have reached deep into our galaxy. Does 
anyone seriously think, even if there is no life on one of the trillion upon trillion of planets, there won’t be one habitable to mankind, even if there are no green men? Can we live infinitely? Many of us already can — the really healthy and those under 90 without Alzheimer’s. How will we look? Researchers are already hard at work on finding drugs that can slow the ageing process. Before long it they will be able to stop it in its tracks and within 50 years unwind it. The benefits will be huge apart from removing the fear of death. The older one gets the wiser, the more sensitive and compassionate one is. This should enable the cessation of wars, the fast removal of tropical diseases, the ease of dealing with problems that come up, such as climate change, criminality and a thousand of other traits of humankind that bug us now and in the future. What will we do with our time? Apart from space exploration. All of us will become highly educated and technically proficient, enabling discoveries we can’t even imagine. We will become more cultured, interested and involved in the many thousands of Bronte’s and Tagores that will exist in the world. We will become highly 
sophisticated in the creation of music, art and literature. There will be millions of budding Shakespeares, Mozarts, Brontes and Tagores, Beatles, architects and Michelangelos. The world will become a much more beautiful and liveable place. One thing that can’t be changed is the burning out of our sun and then we all go. But that is trillions of years ahead. We can be pretty sure that some of us, and soon the world, can live that long. [rc] Jonathan Power is a foreign affairs commentator and analyst based in London. E-Mail: JonatPower@aol.com © 2009 Khaleej Times