The Quest For Immortality: What Would We Do With An Indefinitely-Expandable Lifespan...?

in #life7 years ago

If you had no limit on the number of years in this lifetime, what would you do...?

Alot of tech investors, scientists, and thought leaders have been working in the direction of making this a reasonable question. With cats like Ray Kurzweil leading the Singularity movement, Aubrey deGrey growing his SENS Foundation to uncover the secrets of anti-aging science, a whole tribe of transhumanists seeking to merge man with machine, create AI nanobots and 3D-printed biological parts to provide solutions to all kinds of disease and reverse the aging process - alot of brilliant minds are concluding that the human species is on the brink of greatly increasing its lifespan - if not unlocking the codes to achieving outright immortality.

No folks, this isn't science fiction. This is going down.

Time will tell whether we reach the actual immortality part - though with the rapid exponential acceleration of technology development underway, we shall soonly be living longer, higher-quality lives soon enough. And while alot of this - like any new technology in its early states - might be a bit on the costly side, inevitably the prices of many of these solutions could likely be predicted to decrease such that any of us reading this could live well into our hundreds - if not thousands.

That's an interesting thought, really.

And while I've been reading bits and pieces about this type of stuff here and there for a while, I came across this article today - "If you’re alive in 30 years, it’s likely you will be alive in 1000 years" - and it got me thinking:

What would I do with this life, were it to last that long...?



I mean... let's consider this for a moment...

Life is pretty friggin' awesome.

There are so many beautiful places to see in this world. Tons of amazing foods to eat, wines & spirits to taste... massages to be enjoyed... music to listen to and create...

There are thousands upon thousands of awesome books to read... ridiculous amounts of art to discover and appreciate... all kinds of great conversations to have... all kinds of creative business projects to engage in to create value for the world... so many things to learn, skills to develop...

Would there actually come a point where it got tiring...?

Maybe. Maybe not.

And then again, can any of us really accurate predict what the world would be like hundreds of years from now, such that we could make an accurate call right now as to whether that'd be a world we'd even want to live in?

Technology is accelerating fast. And who knows how radically different every aspect of our society might be down the road. Sure, there'd be some cool stuff to experience. But who knows - maybe we'd end up getting tired of all the change at some point. Maybe it'd become so unfamiliar, and we'd have experienced so much in a lifetime, that the desire to keep up and keep going just wasn't there anymore.

It's kinda impossible to say.



Sometimes, it's depressing to think of how little time we actually have to accomplish and experience everything we might want to in this lifetime. Perhaps no time limit could be a huge blessing, allowing us to pack our lives with as much richness as we wanted to without restrictions.

Or maybe that's naive thinking. Maybe such wouldn't take into account the potential for the loss of lovers, family, friends, or some drastic world events causing some major heartbreak that drained our will to carry on. Maybe the influence & presence of technology in our lives would take over to such a huge degree that our souls would feel starved for a humanness lost somewhere along the way.

Maybe it'd be thrilling to constantly be expanding our creative potentials, experiencing new lovers, having new adventures. Until we repeated the cycles so many times all the joys lost their charm, each new high slightly less exciting. Maybe the curiosity and anticipation for the new would be fated to decline, as nothing might no longer come as a surprise, having seen and been through so much.

Maybe the older we got, the less important alot of the things and goals we once valued would seem.

Maybe financial freedom would become inevitable. And with that time freedom, maybe all the things we wanted to do without the stress of money wouldn't seem as idealistic as they once did. Maybe our enthusiasm and passion to make a difference in the world would find itself in a rather uncomfortable place, as we discovered the world sorting itself all out - the problems we once wanted to help solve, being worked out before we got to them.



I just happened to be listening to this song on Spotify while writing that last paragraph, and it felt to go quite well with the subject - thus adding it in here. The entire Bonobo album, Migration, is actually a damn good fitting soundtrack for this exploration.

As I look back over the last 15 years of my life, since leaving high school - it went by pretty scarily fast. In honesty, I wish I had done alot more in that time than I had, and the prospect of life extension to make up for it - and knowing how fast time does fly - seems somewhat relieving.

In that time, I've enjoyed living in different places, countries, undertaking different adventures and projects. I'm not sure I'd be happy settling down in one place for the rest of my life - and it could actually be pretty cool to spend a few years in places all over the globe, taking in different cultures, finding nuggets of gold through routines of afternoon coffee-shop writing sessions in Italy, Hong Kong, New York, Dubai, Australia - accumulating a wealth of experience while connecting with brilliant minds, artists, entrepreneurs, creating amazing magic.

Though, at what point would the non-stop movement begin getting old?

Maybe new technologies would provide an unlimited supply of energy to fuel the next adventure. But, would it ever get tiring...?

Fucked if I know.

Maybe there's only one way to really find out.

Yet, we can't exactly live as though such a route is a concrete possibility.

At this point, life does have a time limit. The tech may be on its way to extend our lives, but where we're at now, we could still be taken out well-before it arrives.

As such, balancing that question of what would we do if we could live forever maybe requires asking its opposite: what are we doing now, with the limited time we have NOW?

Perhaps we could live indefinitely. And maybe we would get bored. Maybe we'd get tired of the ceaseless change. Maybe we'd tire of the endless adventures and excitement...

And if that were the case - what from all those hundreds of years might we want to condense into a jam-packed 70 or 80, that we could begin working on living out right here and now...?



"The Singularity IS near."

And we're about to dive into a vortex of accelerated growth unlike mankind has ever experienced.

Maybe eternal life is the outcome.

Maybe extinction is - perhaps we'll become the victims of our own hunger for the ultimate control.

None of us can know.

Though, we do each have control over how we manage the time and energy of this day - laying the bricks of the path in the direction we choose to go in this unfolding chapter.

Maybe a nuclear holocaust shall come out of nowhere and blow it to smithereens. Maybe an earthquake hits and swallows it up whole with us. Maybe a meteorite will strike earth and it's game over.

Nonetheless, these foundational bricks we lay are forming the road that's moving us forward - whether that road carries on for another 50 years, five, five thousand, or anywhere in between or more.

I suppose the question, then, is... what type of path do we choose to lay, in what direction...?

And that is a question each of us can only answer for our own...



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Excellent post to make many think and think... This is great soul food that could last for hundreds of years really! Hey, maybe it could even fill most of that loooong time living?

Anyhow, I love the choices of quotes you exposed us to and the clarity of your writing as well. What t do with the time I am given, or have chosen to be here for, is an existential question on top of many that is definitely worth delving into.

Thanks for the quality and opportunity to think again about such a matter, whether there's only a few minutes left or lifetimes to go through, it is always worth its while. Namaste :)

I must descent from the consensus on this topic and say that eternal life would be appalling.

A limitless supply of anything devalues it and would only make things unbearable given enough time. Take a moment to think of what has lost it's luster to you in the time that you have lived, now imagine all of the other things that will throughout the rest of you limited life, now if you live to a hundred that by our standards is considered a long time. stretch this to 1000 years and I can't conceive of someone who would not beg for death at this point. Taking this a step further 1000 years would only scratch the surface of "eternity".

I consider death comforting in a way knowing that ultimately there is no seriousness, or purpose to the universe.

I do however feel that this quest is an immutable desire that will not be separated from the human psyche, nor do I suggest that it should be. I personally don't think there is anything that "should" happen.

Anyway that's my 2 cents.

do not think begging for death would be necessary, maybe a beautiful goodbye/euthanasia ceremony?

Those who seeks solution of aging which also seek to avoid mortality are just trying to prove something with the knowledge that they have but would not wanted a life of immortality. Yes, keeping alive is great in fact nobody would wanted to die soon. But if you're going stay alive for centuries while all your friends and families have all rested in peace, what is the meaning of life then? This is what living is all about, staying alive and die on the right time.

It's an interesting thought, but society would change a lot. Any person trying to live longer today via good health would have all that energy directed towards not being killed for example. Over population would be a concern, one/two child policies worldwide punishable by incineration, dictators and tyrants would live forever. Not trying to be a downer at all, but there's always a cost of some kind. To be honest though, I would expect advances into immortality to be so expensive only a select few could ever afford it, and I doubt they would want it becoming any more affordable. I think I took a rather grim approach to that, sorry, my thoughts anyway hah.

your reality sounds awful.

Haha, I probably watch too many end of world movies or something. XD

maybe add some romcoms. lolz

Every vampire I've ever known from movies and shows seems to despise immortality. Just sayin. :D

Indefinite? Jeez, I would probably kill myself :p

Kidding aside, this is an excellent post! Great work.

The merging of man and machine is part of the luciferian agenda to trap your soul in the mortal world and keep you a slave.

ooooh... and "lk666" just came and posted after you... "they" are onto you... :-p

Great post! However imho the spiritual realm is real and death is necessary. Life extension up to a thousand years would only make sense if we could experience on a galactic if not universal level, but we're meant to cross over to a non material existence. This place is only here for the experience of the material and to learn from. In most aspects this place is not even real, especially our ego.
Great post though and I do look forward to see what science and technology has in store.

I love how you showed up and commented just after the guy talking about the luciferian agenda... lol :-D

I had to go back and read the comment and that is very funny indeed LOL

30, 70, 150 1000- timing for a cross over seems unimportant. have fun in this expression, however the time

Well said, life is an incredible gift no matter the time...but a long journey does sound like more fun.