You aren’t aging so it’s preserving the integrity of your organs. But it’s not a time machine pill and everyone can buy and use it if they want, so it’s not a Groundhog Day situation.
Ahh I see what you mean. The pill is able to both allow you to continue to learn new information and develop normally while preventing negative age related effects like dementia from forming. Of course in reality there would likely be some contradiction there, but I’ll just wave my hands and say the pill has magic fairy dust (harvested from happy fairies who are happy to share it so there’s no ethical considerations there).
I don’t think I would. Perhaps for a few years, at most, but at some point you would find yourself feeling alone and tired. Even with the possibility of stopping to take the pills at any moment.
As we lose loved ones, friends, relatives, our world shrinks. And that is something you have to carry for the entirity of your existence, the longing for people you lost or were deprived of. Or it could just be you to be forgotten by others.
Eternal youth is a burden because you would age nonetheless but only inside your skull. It takes a special kind of person to deal with “immortality” and not turn cynical or callous, assuming that at a given point you wouldn’t just simply lose your sanity.
This is a recurring theme in literature and the outcome is usually the same: immortals long for the rest denied to them, as the world moves forward with complete disregard for their longing of what was and disappears.
No one has ever had to deal with this so we have no idea of knowing what psychological effects would occur. “It’s been explored in literature” does not have the same meaning as “it’s been the subject of a double-blind study”.
I think most “ooh it would be bad to be immortal actually” is just copeium - people convincing themselves they don’t want something because they can’t have it anyways, so it’s less of a blow when they can’t get it.
To the detriment of hard science, there are experiments that shoul not, can not and will not ever be more than thought experiments.
It’s not very difficult to gauge how external change affects us. Unless we have a very special “wiring” in our minds, it breaks us in an over elaborate death by a thousand cuts.
Many people who lived long and fruitful and well lived lives left behind tellings, especially in the form of diaries, on how they missed that person, or pet, or place or something else. And this is something any human being can easily relate to.
Eternal youth would turn cruel to those having it.
We lose people we care about all the time during life and most of the time we don’t want our lives to end because we lost our friends, family or even lovers. If anything, it gets easier to accept loss as you get older. There’s no reason to think that trend would reverse.
Are you trying to convey we grow indifferent to loss or just accept it more easily or just develop better ways to keep our feelings to ourselves?
Over an average life span of 75 years we may lose, let’s average, around 35 meaningful persons.
Now lets scale that figure twice, three, four times. Or even more, because who knows what other nefarious effects the sense of immortality would have on our psyche?
At some point it would grow enough on any sane person having to cope with losing one loved one after the other.
They’d have to practice every skill regularly. Any skill you gain if you don’t keep it up you’ll lose it over time. Sure it’ll be easier to pick back up again but you won’t do it anywhere near you did the last time
Will it be simply cosmetic event or would it involve preserving the integrety of your internal organs?
If it’s the second: welcome to Groundhog Day, except the rest of the world moves and you stay still.
You aren’t aging so it’s preserving the integrity of your organs. But it’s not a time machine pill and everyone can buy and use it if they want, so it’s not a Groundhog Day situation.
Your brain actively changes in order to acquire new information. If the drug preserves the integrity, when you close your eyes, it’s a reset.
Thus, Groundhog Day.
Ahh I see what you mean. The pill is able to both allow you to continue to learn new information and develop normally while preventing negative age related effects like dementia from forming. Of course in reality there would likely be some contradiction there, but I’ll just wave my hands and say the pill has magic fairy dust (harvested from happy fairies who are happy to share it so there’s no ethical considerations there).
Let’s allow the magic dust, then.
I don’t think I would. Perhaps for a few years, at most, but at some point you would find yourself feeling alone and tired. Even with the possibility of stopping to take the pills at any moment.
As we lose loved ones, friends, relatives, our world shrinks. And that is something you have to carry for the entirity of your existence, the longing for people you lost or were deprived of. Or it could just be you to be forgotten by others.
Eternal youth is a burden because you would age nonetheless but only inside your skull. It takes a special kind of person to deal with “immortality” and not turn cynical or callous, assuming that at a given point you wouldn’t just simply lose your sanity.
This is a recurring theme in literature and the outcome is usually the same: immortals long for the rest denied to them, as the world moves forward with complete disregard for their longing of what was and disappears.
No one has ever had to deal with this so we have no idea of knowing what psychological effects would occur. “It’s been explored in literature” does not have the same meaning as “it’s been the subject of a double-blind study”.
I think most “ooh it would be bad to be immortal actually” is just copeium - people convincing themselves they don’t want something because they can’t have it anyways, so it’s less of a blow when they can’t get it.
To the detriment of hard science, there are experiments that shoul not, can not and will not ever be more than thought experiments.
It’s not very difficult to gauge how external change affects us. Unless we have a very special “wiring” in our minds, it breaks us in an over elaborate death by a thousand cuts.
Many people who lived long and fruitful and well lived lives left behind tellings, especially in the form of diaries, on how they missed that person, or pet, or place or something else. And this is something any human being can easily relate to.
Eternal youth would turn cruel to those having it.
We lose people we care about all the time during life and most of the time we don’t want our lives to end because we lost our friends, family or even lovers. If anything, it gets easier to accept loss as you get older. There’s no reason to think that trend would reverse.
Are you trying to convey we grow indifferent to loss or just accept it more easily or just develop better ways to keep our feelings to ourselves?
Over an average life span of 75 years we may lose, let’s average, around 35 meaningful persons.
Now lets scale that figure twice, three, four times. Or even more, because who knows what other nefarious effects the sense of immortality would have on our psyche?
At some point it would grow enough on any sane person having to cope with losing one loved one after the other.
He’s trying to say that humans with unlimited time would become masters of many things
They’d have to practice every skill regularly. Any skill you gain if you don’t keep it up you’ll lose it over time. Sure it’ll be easier to pick back up again but you won’t do it anywhere near you did the last time