Good news, if you want to live forever. This post from Thrillist highlights how Nobel-winning chemists have nearly unlocked the key to immortality. The Nobel Prize in chemistry doesn't get nearly as much attention as the ones that go out for peace or literature -- especially this year, when the latter was controversially awarded to songwriter Bob Dylan. Amidst all the Dylan ... Continue Reading
The Key to Longevity
There have been leaps forward in science swirling around our obsession with living forever and longevity of life-- check out the latest news! This post from VICE highlights how Jellyfish, Nanobots and Naked Mole Rats could make humans immortal. Dr. Chris Faulkes is standing in his laboratory, tenderly caressing what looks like a penis. It's not his penis, nor mine, and it's ... Continue Reading
Ray Kurzweil On Making Immortality a Reality
What if we could overcome disease and aging to extend our lives indefinitely? Inventor, author and futurist Ray Kurzweil says immortality could become a reality soon. He sees living forever in our future. Kurzweil reflects on the exponential growth of technology and the promise of human immortality. In this post from KurzweilAI Inventor Ray Kurzweil sees immortality in our ... Continue Reading
Immortality: A Reality in Just 30 Years?
Advanced technologies can make immortality a reality. If you're alive in 30 years, chances are you may also be alive in a 1000 years. This post from haakonsk.blogg.no raises the hope that one day technology may make it possible to live indefinitely without getting an old body. Sounds unlikely? It's not - it's actually quite likely. The only way to get people to live for a ... Continue Reading
A Cookbook for People Who Want to Live Forever
The Longevity Cookbook, being written by a Russian biologist, will showcase ingredients that are known to increase human lifespans, and recipes built around them. This post from Motherboard turns the spot light on the cookbook meant for people who want to live forever. For many scientists, a lifelong love of learning is just that—lifelong. But for Russian biologist Maria ... Continue Reading